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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039892_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.5.<lb/>
No. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m are without money<lb/>
SGA funds are 'frozen'<lb/>
All Student Government Association<lb/>
funds were frozen on Friday, Nov. 30 after<lb/>
a dispute among 3GA officials about the<lb/>
legality of an October 17 bill involving an<lb/>
appropriation of $87,000 to the ECU<lb/>
Publications Board.<lb/>
Ad revenues, or receivables, are being<lb/>
used in publication of Fountainhead until<lb/>
this issue is resolved, according to Editor,<lb/>
Pat Crawford. The case is expected to go<lb/>
before the Review Board, the judicial<lb/>
court of the SGA.<lb/>
The dispute came about when SGA<lb/>
President Bill Bodenhamer declared on<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 30 that the bill, which was<lb/>
passed before the Legislature on Nov. 12,<lb/>
was not in effect because he had not<lb/>
affixed his signature to it. The<lb/>
opposition, made up of several other SGA<lb/>
officials, claimed that his signature on the<lb/>
bill was not necessary, that the bill was<lb/>
effective ten days from the date that<lb/>
Bodenhamer received the bill unless he<lb/>
decided to veto.<lb/>
NO POCKET VETO<lb/>
The SGA constitution states that<lb/>
the SGA President has the power "to veto<lb/>
acts of the legislature provided that he<lb/>
exercise such power within ten days of<lb/>
receiving the bill There is no provision<lb/>
for the president to enjoy a privilege of<lb/>
"pocket veto" whereby the bill dies<lb/>
without his signature.<lb/>
Tom Clare, SGA attorney general, in<lb/>
his advisory opinion to Bodenhamer and<lb/>
Braxton Hall, Speaker of the Legislature,<lb/>
states that "any granting of 'pocket veto'<lb/>
power to the president would only serve<lb/>
to weiken the Legislature and its<lb/>
authority to appropriate funds and enact<lb/>
laws Clare's opinion rules, therefore,<lb/>
that the bill will become law with or<lb/>
without Bodenhamer's signature.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER DISPUTE<lb/>
The dispute among tne SGA<lb/>
officials also involves the issue of<lb/>
whether the photographer (who serves all<lb/>
publications and the SGA) should serve<lb/>
under the Publications Board or under the<lb/>
Executive Council, headed by Boden-<lb/>
hamer<lb/>
Braxton Hall and Mike Ertis, SGA<lb/>
treasurer, represented one faction which<lb/>
advocated that the photographer serve<lb/>
under the Pub Board which would employ<lb/>
and pay him. Bodenhamer, who wrote the<lb/>
original bill, thought that the photo-<lb/>
grapher should remain under the<lb/>
Executive Council but did not specify this<lb/>
in the bill. In order for the photographer<lb/>
to remain under the Executive Council,<lb/>
the bill would have had to state that<lb/>
$80,000 be allocated to the Pub Board<lb/>
while $7,000 would remain under the<lb/>
Executive Council.<lb/>
NICK EEL WAS' CHAIRMAN<lb/>
Bodenhamer, in response to the<lb/>
dispute over the validity of the Pub Board<lb/>
bill, said, "Three people have been<lb/>
conspiring together: Mike Ertis, SGA<lb/>
Treasurer; Braxton Hall, Speaker of the<lb/>
Legislature and Bob McKeel, who was<lb/>
the chairman of the Publications<lb/>
Board. Bodenhamer claims McKeel's post<lb/>
is now invalid.<lb/>
However, according to Braxton Hall,<lb/>
"Bob McKeel was elected last year for a<lb/>
two-year lerm and was duly elected by the<lb/>
Pub Board as its chairman. He seems to<lb/>
be saying that everything that is against<lb/>
him is unconstitutional<lb/>
The bill was passed before the<lb/>
Legislature on Monday, Nov. 12. The next<lb/>
morning Mike Ertis wrote out an<lb/>
appropriation sheet for $87,000 to the Pub<lb/>
Board. This use of SGA money, since the<lb/>
bill is invalid, is totally illegal and he is<lb/>
responsible for the money up to this<lb/>
P0101- Ertis refuted this charge saying<lb/>
that Article 4, of the Constitution, on<lb/>
Presidential powers, (which states that<lb/>
the President has the power to veto acts<lb/>
of Legislature provided that he shall<lb/>
exercise such power within ten days of<lb/>
receiving the bill) "doesn't indicate<lb/>
whether the President's receipt of the bill<lb/>
has to be oral or written, therefore, the<lb/>
bill should have gone into effect<lb/>
"To suggest that a conspiracy is being<lb/>
waged just because you can't get your<lb/>
SGA Treasurer, Mike Ertis<lb/>
SGA President, Bill Bodenhamer<lb/>
Model UN is planned<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
"France has just offered the Arab<lb/>
nations nuclear weaoons and technical<lb/>
assistance in their deployment. An<lb/>
emergency session of the General<lb/>
Assembly has been called and will<lb/>
commence immediately<lb/>
No, the Middle East isn't going to<lb/>
erupt into nuclear conflict, but this could<lb/>
be one of the situation games played at a<lb/>
model United Nations conference. An<lb/>
ECU delegation could be required to act<lb/>
on just such a situation when it travels to<lb/>
any one of three conferences this year.<lb/>
The SGA Office of International Affairs<lb/>
has been coordinating efforts to field a<lb/>
delegation to conferences in Virginia,<lb/>
Pennsylvania and New York. John Dixon,<lb/>
a graduate student, and Dr. Hans Indorf of<lb/>
the political science department will act<lb/>
"It's the only thing that we have to<lb/>
gain academic recognition on a national<lb/>
level explained Bob Lucas, Secretary for<lb/>
International Affairs. ECU delegations<lb/>
have consistently placed high in<lb/>
competition with schools usually<lb/>
considered more prestigious academically<lb/>
than ECU.<lb/>
Model UN delegations are not limited<lb/>
to political science majors. The dele-<lb/>
gations are involved in every matter from<lb/>
economic aid to birth control and<lb/>
education which requires participants<lb/>
knowledgeable in other fields than<lb/>
political science. A aood background in<lb/>
parliamentary procedure and public<lb/>
speaking are the only requirements to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
The members of the three delegations<lb/>
will be chosen by the students<lb/>
participating in the program. At the Dec.<lb/>
11 meeting, the country that ECU will<lb/>
represent will be announced. Either<lb/>
Indonesia, India or Yugoslavia will be<lb/>
assigned by the schools conducting the<lb/>
conferences. There will then be an<lb/>
opportunity for interested students to<lb/>
research the country regarding history,<lb/>
customs, attitudes and actions in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
Delegates will be chosen on the basis<lb/>
of their knowledge of the country. The<lb/>
reason for this, explained Dixon, is that<lb/>
delegations are scored on their ability to<lb/>
act in the same way as their real<lb/>
counter-parts in the UN.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
way is as ridiculous as blaming 'news<lb/>
leaks' for inefficiency and ineptness,<lb/>
Hall charged, "One person isn't and<lb/>
cannot be the entire Student Govern-<lb/>
ment  if that were true there would be a<lb/>
student monarchy.<lb/>
I feel that the SGA President has to<lb/>
learn that there are others with as much<lb/>
talent for leadership as himself, he<lb/>
continued, and he has to resolve it with<lb/>
himself that he is not endowed with the<lb/>
powers of a mideval Pope. Until that is<lb/>
realized, I feel that those student leaders<lb/>
with a sincere desire to produce positive<lb/>
legislation with the benefit of the<lb/>
students in mind are going to continue to<lb/>
oppose being unjustly dominated<lb/>
Hall went on to say, "I don't<lb/>
understand where Bodenhamer got the<lb/>
impression that Ertis, McKeel and I had a<lb/>
conspiracy against him because the three<lb/>
of us have never talked together about<lb/>
him. I think that it is an obviously<lb/>
paranoid statement any anyone in such a<lb/>
mental state should not be in such a<lb/>
position of responsibility<lb/>
Bodenhamer stated, "I don't like three<lb/>
people getting together arid when I'm out<lb/>
of town one day and come back in<lb/>
here behind my back. When those<lb/>
three conspired together, you see, they all<lb/>
throw it this way - and I'm legally right so<lb/>
I'm not really concerned<lb/>
A summary of the effects of the<lb/>
dispute among the SGA officials<lb/>
concerning the Publications Board<lb/>
appropriations bill is as follows: If the<lb/>
Pub Board bill is vetoed by Bodenhamer,<lb/>
who now has until December 10th to<lb/>
decide on it, money must be<lb/>
re-appropriated and the same bill<lb/>
introduced on the floor of the Legislature.<lb/>
To over-ride the veto, the Legislature<lb/>
must obtain a 23 majority. If the veto is<lb/>
not over-ridden, the money that has so far<lb/>
Deen allocated by SGA Treasurer Mike<lb/>
Ertis will have been "misappropriated"<lb/>
;according to Bodenhamer) and there will<lb/>
have to be a legal settlement.<lb/>
At the time the Fountainhead went to<lb/>
press, its funds were still "frozen" with no<lb/>
financial resolution in sight other than ad<lb/>
revenues, or receivables. It will continue<lb/>
to appear until these and other available<lb/>
sources are exhausted.<lb/>
Real house<lb/>
receives<lb/>
SGA money<lb/>
By SUSAN QUINN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Legislature voted to<lb/>
appropriate $1700 to the Real House in a<lb/>
meeting yesterday.<lb/>
This appropriation will supplement<lb/>
other donations granted to the Real<lb/>
House in funding expenses.<lb/>
In other business a bill was to<lb/>
appropriate $1,300 to pay for the first bus<lb/>
which the SGA bought this summer.<lb/>
It was announced that Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins will address the legislature at<lb/>
their next meeting which will be held in<lb/>
the legislature room December 10.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
newsf<lb/>
rulf<lb/>
4<lb/>
LTfTH<lb/>
2<lb/>
woiwywM<lb/>
Donations<lb/>
Are you planning a happy and joyous<lb/>
Christmas? Why not help someone else<lb/>
enjoy the Yuletide season by donating to<lb/>
the Christmas drive sponsored by Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha fraternity. Clothes, toys, and<lb/>
other donations will be collected in the<lb/>
lobby of the Campus Union from<lb/>
December 3, through December 13,<lb/>
1973. Your donations will be greatly<lb/>
appreciated.<lb/>
Epsilon Lamba<lb/>
The Epsilon Lamdba chapter of Pi<lb/>
Sigma Alpha, the National Political<lb/>
Science Honor Society, will hold its<lb/>
monthly meeting on December 5, 1973, at<lb/>
6:30 at Parker's. The city manager of<lb/>
Greenville will be the guest speaker at the<lb/>
dinner meeting.<lb/>
All students and faculty are invited to<lb/>
attend. Anyone who is interested in<lb/>
attending should drop by the Political<lb/>
Science Department, SA-119.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
The Sigma Tau Delta National English<lb/>
Honor Society will meet Thursday, Dec. 6,<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m. in room 201 of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
The program will include a brief<lb/>
initiation ritual. Dr. Sanders speaking on<lb/>
poetry and transparencies, and Professor<lb/>
Ward discussing the Poetry Forum, Tar<lb/>
3iver Poets, and his own poetry. The<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
U.N. conferences<lb/>
East Carolina University is participat-<lb/>
ing in three Model United Nations<lb/>
Conferences this school year. ECU will<lb/>
be sending a total of twelve delegates to<lb/>
Duquense University, Pittsburgh, Hollins<lb/>
College, Roanoke, Virginia and National<lb/>
Model U.N. in New York. Bob Lucas,<lb/>
Secretary of International Affairs urges all<lb/>
interested individuals, regardless of major<lb/>
to attend an explanatory meeting<lb/>
December 11, 1973 in Wright Annex, room<lb/>
203 at 7:30. This is an excellent<lb/>
opportunity to meet individuals from other<lb/>
universities, to travel, and above all, a<lb/>
chance to become involved in an exciting<lb/>
worthwhile project.<lb/>
SGA applications Phi Ma Alpha Gymnastics<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
for SGA Legislature vacancies in Jones,<lb/>
Greene and Fleming formitories. Appli-<lb/>
cations can be picked up in room 312<lb/>
Wright.<lb/>
Phi Ma Alpha, a professional music<lb/>
fraternity for men will hold a smoker for<lb/>
all interested men on Sunday, December<lb/>
9, 1973 at 3:00 p.m. in the faculty lounge<lb/>
of the Fletcher Music Center. (Coat and<lb/>
tie please.)<lb/>
Angel Flight rush Christmas gift<lb/>
The East Carolina Angel Flight would<lb/>
like for you to join our organization.<lb/>
Angel Flight can widen your interest,<lb/>
promote more social and intellectual<lb/>
confidence, and provide many endearing<lb/>
friendships<lb/>
We are a growing organization with a<lb/>
proud heritage and a loving respect for<lb/>
our country. As a non-profit, honorary,<lb/>
service organization comprised of<lb/>
selected college coeds, we serve our<lb/>
country, our community, our university,<lb/>
and our corps with pride.<lb/>
We have many social and recreational<lb/>
activities, plus our service work. We have<lb/>
sister flights with a combined member-<lb/>
ship of over 3,000 college women. Our<lb/>
primary purpose is to serve the Air Force<lb/>
cadets on campus as their hostesses and<lb/>
help promote the interest and respect for<lb/>
the corps that it deserves.<lb/>
Angel Flight is a spirit, a bond, and a<lb/>
unity of goals and achievements. Why<lb/>
not investigate the advantages of joining<lb/>
Angel Flight? Drop into our headquarters<lb/>
on first floor Whichard Annex. We want<lb/>
to welcome you personally and show you<lb/>
our sisterhood of spirit.<lb/>
Angel Flight Winter Rush will be held<lb/>
Monday, December 3, 7:30 at room 201 in<lb/>
the student union; Tuesday, December 4,<lb/>
7:30 at room 113 Whichard Annex; and<lb/>
Thursday, December 6, 7:30 at room 113<lb/>
Whichard Annex.<lb/>
Students and faculty interested in an<lb/>
inexpensive, but very useful gift for<lb/>
Christmas contact any interior design<lb/>
student on campus who is a member of<lb/>
the National Society of Interior<lb/>
Design. These art students are selling a<lb/>
variety of Stationery for one dollar a<lb/>
package. This wouid be a great stocking<lb/>
stuffer. The stationery will be sold up till<lb/>
December 12.<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
Dr. Coble<lb/>
Dr. Charles R. Coble of the ECU<lb/>
science education faculty is the author of<lb/>
a research report in the current issue of<lb/>
the journal "The American Biology<lb/>
Teacher<lb/>
His article discusses the results of a<lb/>
survey of 424 biology students and their<lb/>
teachers recently completed by Dr. Coble.<lb/>
According to the Coble survey, there is<lb/>
a correlation between the students'<lb/>
achievement in biology and the teacher's<lb/>
level of self-actualization, a measure of<lb/>
mental health.<lb/>
The Ceramics Guild, a student<lb/>
organization in the Ceramics Department,<lb/>
School of Art, ECU will present an<lb/>
ExhibitionSale of first quality work from<lb/>
9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m Wednesday,<lb/>
December 12, on the first floor of the ECU<lb/>
Student Union.<lb/>
Proceeds from this event will be used<lb/>
for the Summer School Scholarship Fund<lb/>
which grants scholarships to deserving<lb/>
students who wish to attend accredited<lb/>
summer programs and workshops in<lb/>
ceramics. In the past funds have been<lb/>
raised through participation at the<lb/>
Greenville Art Center's Spring Show with<lb/>
the annual "driveway" sale. Students<lb/>
have been able to attend such summer<lb/>
programs as Arrowmont School in<lb/>
Gatlinburg, Tenn Penland School of<lb/>
Crafts in the N.C. mountains, State<lb/>
University of New York College of<lb/>
Ceramics, and others. Everyone is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Music recital<lb/>
Melissa Morgan Thrasher, senior<lb/>
soprano voice student in the East Carolina<lb/>
University School of Music, will perform<lb/>
in recital Thursday, Dec. 6, in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Recital Hall at 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Her accompanist will be Sarah Lynn<lb/>
Williams, harpsichordist and pianist, and<lb/>
she will be assisted by oboist Tim<lb/>
Hoffman and cellist Wendy Harmon.<lb/>
Contents<lb/>
PUB BOARD BILL RULED "INVALIDpage one<lb/>
"HAIR"AND HEADACHESpage three<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPYpage four<lb/>
GREENVILLE HOUSINGpage five<lb/>
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARYFORUMpages six and seven<lb/>
REVIEWSpage eight<lb/>
JAPANESE LIFEpages nine and ten<lb/>
SPORTSpages eleven and twelve<lb/>
Womens Gymnastics Intersquad Meet<lb/>
will be held Wed. Dec. 5, 1973 at 7:00 in<lb/>
Memorial Gym on campus.<lb/>
The ECU Women's Gymnastics team<lb/>
will have an exhibitional intersquad meet<lb/>
for students and public, with no<lb/>
admission charge.<lb/>
S.A.M. meeting<lb/>
The Society for Advancement of<lb/>
Management will have a dinner meeting<lb/>
Thurs. 6 Dec. at 6:30 at Fiddler's Three.<lb/>
Rudy Allsbrook, District Marketing<lb/>
Manager for Carolina Telephone and<lb/>
Telegraph, will speak on The Development<lb/>
of College Dormitory Telephone Sales.<lb/>
Those interested call Allan Jones at<lb/>
758-2337.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi society will have<lb/>
a dinner meeting at Bonanza Steak<lb/>
House, Tuesday, December 4. Members<lb/>
will meet at Wright Circle at 5:45 for<lb/>
rides. All members are requested to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Thank you<lb/>
The Brothers of Alpha Phi Omega .<lb/>
Service Fraternity would like to thank you<lb/>
for the help and consideration shown<lb/>
from you with Rock-A-Thon, 1973. With<lb/>
your help we were able to raise<lb/>
approximately $2,000 for the United Fund.<lb/>
Y.D.C meeting<lb/>
Tom Eamon, Prof, of Political Science<lb/>
at ECU and newly elected President of<lb/>
State Young Democrats, will be guest<lb/>
speaker at Y.D.C. meeting Wednesday<lb/>
night at 8:00 p.m. in SC-103.<lb/>
Also speaking will be John Prevette,<lb/>
Executive Vice-Chairman of the College<lb/>
Federation. All visitors are cordially<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
SGA vacancies<lb/>
As you may have heard, there are, or<lb/>
will be several vacancies in the Student<lb/>
Government here at ECU. Many of these<lb/>
positions were held by freshmen, but<lb/>
because of grades and other personal<lb/>
reasons, some of our class officers and<lb/>
S.G.A. Legislators have resigned.<lb/>
The purpose of this letter is to inform<lb/>
you of the vacancies and to urge you to<lb/>
take an active part in Student<lb/>
Government. Your participation in Stu-<lb/>
dent Government can be a very rewarding<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
If one or more of the legislators from<lb/>
your dorm resign, and you would like to<lb/>
become more active in Student<lb/>
Government, please apply for the position<lb/>
through Jane Noffsinger, Chairman of the<lb/>
Screenings and Appointments Committee<lb/>
of the S.G.A. The times and places to<lb/>
apply will be announced in the<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
Once again, I urge each of you to<lb/>
seriously consider the opportunity of<lb/>
becoming active in Student Government<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
"Lei<lb/>
elect rif<lb/>
will rur<lb/>
Seer<lb/>
i<lb/>
Nik<lb/>
campu:<lb/>
produc<lb/>
undeci<lb/>
ECUP<lb/>
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to incl<lb/>
is witt<lb/>
accept<lb/>
Th<lb/>
the f<lb/>
accorc<lb/>
innocc<lb/>
childli<lb/>
Be<lb/>
stude<lb/>
were <lb/>
scene<lb/>
evenir<lb/>
done<lb/>
still ir<lb/>
In<lb/>
York,<lb/>
to the<lb/>
desire<lb/>
respo<lb/>
If<lb/>
nude<lb/>
audie<lb/>
itself,<lb/>
innoc<lb/>
in foi<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039892_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
3<lb/>
Merchants prepare<lb/>
for holiday rip-offs<lb/>
"Let the sunshineln" cast of (Hair) rallies round In full hippie dress, ushering in the<lb/>
electrified, strangled, spangled age of the Dawning of Aquarious. The rockmusical hit<lb/>
will run Dec. 5-11 at McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Scene undecided<lb/>
Hair east wants nudity<lb/>
By CAROLYN DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Nudity may or may not come to the<lb/>
campus during the ECU Playhouse<lb/>
production of Hair. The question is still<lb/>
undecided according to Albert Pertahon,<lb/>
ECU Playhouse general manager.<lb/>
The cast of Hair is willing and wants<lb/>
to include the nude scene. The problem<lb/>
is with the audience and how they will<lb/>
accept nudity on the stage.<lb/>
There is a general misconception of<lb/>
the public about the nude scene<lb/>
according to Pertalion. The scene is really<lb/>
innocent and quite asexual, even<lb/>
childlike he says.<lb/>
Because of the many high school<lb/>
students attending matinees the actors<lb/>
were originally to be covered during the<lb/>
scene in matinee performances. For the<lb/>
evening productions the scene would be<lb/>
done in the nude. But even this plan is<lb/>
still indefinite.<lb/>
In the first production of Hair in New<lb/>
York the nude scene was a nightly option<lb/>
to the cast. They could disrobe if they so<lb/>
desired, depending on the audience<lb/>
response to the play.<lb/>
Tany controversy develops over he<lb/>
nude scene it will be done by the<lb/>
audTen? not the actors or thescene<lb/>
itself says Pertalion. The scene s<lb/>
innocent and "the show has a great faith<lb/>
in four-letter words<lb/>
The cast of Hair is made up entirely o<lb/>
ECU drama students with the exception o<lb/>
one leading role. The part of Berger will<lb/>
� p53 by Mitchell Bowen from Wilson.<lb/>
 What about the set? "If� terrific!<lb/>
says Pertalion. Designed by Robert<lb/>
Williams, the set is in construct.v.st.c<lb/>
style There is scaffolding, a curtain of<lb/>
beer cans and red and blue bunting. The<lb/>
effects of the set will be enhanced by the<lb/>
use of black lights, ultraviolet and strobe<lb/>
lighting.<lb/>
ECU is one of the first three<lb/>
universities to produce Hair according to<lb/>
Pertalion. Since major companies pro-<lb/>
duced Hair before road companies,<lb/>
universities could not obtain production<lb/>
rights during the run of the major<lb/>
companies.<lb/>
The first university to request these<lb/>
rights, ECU finally received the rights for<lb/>
a 1973 fall show.<lb/>
Under the co-direction and staging of<lb/>
Edward Loessin and Mavis Ray, Hair will<lb/>
be produced as a period play, a product of<lb/>
the sixties.<lb/>
Hair is classified by Pertalion as a<lb/>
semenal piece. "It fertilized the stage for<lb/>
future shows<lb/>
Hair has 31 songs, unlike most<lb/>
musicals which only have about 16. Some<lb/>
are sung as solos, some by the entire<lb/>
cast, and some are dedicated to a<lb/>
specific point. "Walking in Space"<lb/>
celebrates smoking pot, a relatively new<lb/>
idea to the sixties.<lb/>
Paul Tardif, ECU jazz pianist, will<lb/>
accompany the songs under the direction<lb/>
of Barry Shank, conductor.<lb/>
A pivotal piece for the stage, Hair<lb/>
reflects the love and war movements of<lb/>
the sixties. It had a definite effect on<lb/>
attitudes and even dress.<lb/>
"I would hate to see anyone stay away<lb/>
from Hair, a piece of theatrical history,<lb/>
just because of the nude scene said<lb/>
Pertalion.<lb/>
Hair opens in McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
Dec. 5 and runs through Dec. 11 with no<lb/>
show on Sunday. Curtain is at 8:15 each<lb/>
night with a 2:15 p.m. matinee on<lb/>
Thursday, Dec. 6. Admission is $2.50 for<lb/>
the public. Presentation of I.D. and<lb/>
activity cards will be required for<lb/>
students. Tickets may be obtained at<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium box office.<lb/>
By SUSAN SHERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As the season of peace, joy, and<lb/>
goodwill draws near, the busy shopping<lb/>
season also begins. Along with the<lb/>
hustle and bustle of Christmas comes a<lb/>
prime time for shoplifters (or so it seems).<lb/>
The merchants around Greenville are<lb/>
becoming increasingly concerned with the<lb/>
amount of shoplifting occurring and are<lb/>
preparing for this type of "Christmas<lb/>
rush<lb/>
Five years ago, a shoplifter may have<lb/>
"Gotten off" with a stem word of warning,<lb/>
but the days of warnings have definitely<lb/>
Headaches<lb/>
are topic<lb/>
for lectures<lb/>
By BARBARA TURNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Have you got a headache? Dr. Robert<lb/>
L Timmons, a Greenville neurosurgeon<lb/>
and clinical professor of surgery in the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine discussed the<lb/>
headache, a pain common to most of us<lb/>
at some time.<lb/>
Dr. Timmons began his lecture by<lb/>
stating that he felt nervous discussing the<lb/>
subject, because he is not sure who is an<lb/>
expert on the headache. It is "one of the<lb/>
subjects that drive neurosurgeons up the<lb/>
wall He mentioned other qualified<lb/>
professionals who could lecture as<lb/>
well. They included the opthamologist,<lb/>
the odologist, and yes the psychiatrist.<lb/>
Headaches are a result of dilatation or<lb/>
contraction of blood vessels and<lb/>
muscles. The brain does not feel pain<lb/>
when it is cut or moved. The pain comes<lb/>
when the skin is stretched and dilatation<lb/>
of blood vessels occurs. Some anatomi-<lb/>
cal slides of the brain showed the areas<lb/>
where pain appear.<lb/>
Pain may also originate outside the<lb/>
skull in the sinuses, eyes, and under the<lb/>
scalp - out of the skull area. Fatigue and<lb/>
tension cause head pain. One should<lb/>
leave a tension causing situation and rest<lb/>
in bed.<lb/>
The hang-over headache, a headache<lb/>
resulting from a spinal tap, tension<lb/>
headache, and the migraine were<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
Treatments range from placing an ice<lb/>
bag on your bead to lying in bed and<lb/>
taking argodonene, a drug discovered in<lb/>
France. Dr. Timmons was opposed to<lb/>
narcotics as a method of treatment for<lb/>
even the most severe headaches. Nar-<lb/>
cotics are a major mistreatment of<lb/>
headaches.<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine and the<lb/>
Department of Pathology's next lecture<lb/>
willbe on January 10, 1974. Dr. Ferguson<lb/>
will speak on High Blood Pressure.<lb/>
passed. Warnings have become obsolete<lb/>
as merchants are cracking down on this<lb/>
type of illegal activity and are presecuting<lb/>
each suspect.<lb/>
The penalties for this crime may be<lb/>
summarized by this statementnone get<lb/>
off Penalties include six months in jail<lb/>
or one hundred dollars fine, or both,<lb/>
revocation of driver's license, and<lb/>
probation. Also in store for college<lb/>
students, exists the possibility of having<lb/>
scholarships and grants rescinded. The<lb/>
first offense usually draws the fine,<lb/>
probation, and license revocation. The<lb/>
second offense draws an active sentence<lb/>
in a state penitentiary. Each penalty can<lb/>
be applied to any person over sixteen<lb/>
years of age. Juvenile cases are handled<lb/>
through parental notification and oc-<lb/>
casionally court.<lb/>
SIX MONTHS FOR WINE<lb/>
One woman, for her second or third<lb/>
offense in shoplifting, is now serving a<lb/>
six months sentence in the state women's<lb/>
penitentiary. An active sentence is the<lb/>
result of being caught while shoplifting<lb/>
a single bottle of wine.<lb/>
Probations in shoplifting cases mean<lb/>
the person convicted must meet with his<lb/>
probation officer month watch his<lb/>
actions carefully, and abstain from the<lb/>
store he was caught in. If the store is one<lb/>
in a chain, he is not allowed to go into<lb/>
any store in the chain. Any breach of<lb/>
probation or any criminal arrest,<lb/>
excluding traffic tickets, results in<lb/>
enforcement of the original sentence. The<lb/>
probationary advisors do not exist in<lb/>
Charlotte, therefore any convictions result<lb/>
in an active sentence.<lb/>
One example which supports the<lb/>
"none get off" statement is the case of a<lb/>
young man caught shoplifting a fifteen<lb/>
cent item. The store chose to prosecute<lb/>
and the young man received a six months<lb/>
suspended sentence, a fifty dollar fine, a<lb/>
three and a half year probation, and had<lb/>
his driver's license revoked for six<lb/>
months.<lb/>
SHOPLIFTING LAW<lb/>
This young man was caught as he left<lb/>
the store, but a suspect may be<lb/>
apprehended while on the premises.<lb/>
North Carolina statues concerning<lb/>
shoplifting state that a suspect may be<lb/>
apprehended on the premises for<lb/>
concealment of any item with the possible<lb/>
intention of avoiding payment. This<lb/>
concealment charge is regarded as a<lb/>
serious misdeameanor, but its fines are<lb/>
as stiff as a full shoplifting charge.<lb/>
To combat the increase in shoplifting<lb/>
activity, Greenville merchants have<lb/>
devised' methods to supervise the<lb/>
shoppers. This may be slightly remines-<lb/>
cent of Orwell's 1984 "Big Brother's<lb/>
watching you however it should prove<lb/>
effective in stemming the "Christmas<lb/>
rush" of shoplifters.<lb/>
Most stores are using plain clothes<lb/>
detectives, one-way mirrors and cat walks<lb/>
around the tops of the stores to help in<lb/>
the fight against Christmas season<lb/>
shoplifting. With these new safety<lb/>
neasures in effect, the potential<lb/>
shoplifter would be wise to reconsider<lb/>
before slipping that attractiva item on the<lb/>
shelf into his pocket.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
Occupational therapy is<lb/>
often misunderstood<lb/>
By JIM DODSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the fall of 1971 the School of Allied<lb/>
Health at ECU initiated a program<lb/>
designed to broaden the scope of service<lb/>
to the people of eastern North Carolina in<lb/>
the area of instruction and rehabilitation<lb/>
therapy.<lb/>
Perhaps because the program is<lb/>
relatively new, there are some miscon-<lb/>
ceptions about what Occupational<lb/>
Therapy students exactly do, and some<lb/>
general misunderstandings about the<lb/>
program's objectives and intentions.<lb/>
"O.T students work with a variety of<lb/>
physically and mentally handicapped<lb/>
people and seek to help the patient gain a<lb/>
better perspective in relation to their<lb/>
particular problem. Through the use of a<lb/>
variety of programmed activities, ranging<lb/>
from the seemingly simple task of<lb/>
teaching a disabled child to use a fork and<lb/>
spoon correctly, to instructing an arthritic<lb/>
patient on how to use a loom, the "O.T<lb/>
student can attack the actual problem in a<lb/>
way that exercises and hopefully<lb/>
rehabilitates the patient and at the same<lb/>
time gives the patient some sense of<lb/>
accomplishment.<lb/>
This teaching is an exercise or<lb/>
"activity" as O.T. students refer to it, is<lb/>
not designed to teach the patient a "skill"<lb/>
for occupational purposes, but rather to<lb/>
help the person to learn to use those<lb/>
faculties which may have not previously<lb/>
been used. This point has often been<lb/>
confused with other programs such as<lb/>
some of the Federal agencies whose aim<lb/>
is to teach a handicapped person one<lb/>
specific skill in order that they may seek<lb/>
employment.<lb/>
Tony Bright, a senior in the O.T.<lb/>
program discussed some of the aspects<lb/>
and activities that students are involved<lb/>
in.<lb/>
"The whole idea of O.T. and Its<lb/>
objectives is to use yourself primarily<lb/>
through the interaction on a meaningful<lb/>
level, sort of a person-to-person<lb/>
relationship. Secondly, the use of<lb/>
activities in which the patient attempts to<lb/>
work with his particular problem. Thirdly,<lb/>
the use of group i ncol cement "<lb/>
Bright delineated upon the use of<lb/>
primary relationships between patient and<lb/>
student:<lb/>
"The use of the personal or one-to-one<lb/>
relationship is important in considering<lb/>
any therapeutic situation, especially in a<lb/>
psychiatric situation where you are<lb/>
dealing with the mental as well as the<lb/>
physical problems that confront the<lb/>
patient. You can accomplish a whole lot<lb/>
by your own interpersonal relationship<lb/>
with the person. You see, we are not just<lb/>
dealing with the physical problems, but<lb/>
also the human emotion s well. That's<lb/>
why it is so important to get to know the<lb/>
person you are working with, in doing so,<lb/>
they learn to trust you and really<lb/>
appreciate your encouragement<lb/>
The field of Occupational Therapy is<lb/>
an ever increasingly exciting and growing<lb/>
area of medical service to the<lb/>
community. There is a very great demana<lb/>
for registered therapists throughout<lb/>
hospitals and clinics in the country. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, O.T. is a relatively new area<lb/>
of concentration ar�d is therefore often<lb/>
misunderstood<lb/>
m<lb/>
In just a few years however, medical<lb/>
experts have become more and more<lb/>
inclined to view it as an area that is<lb/>
indeed a very important aspect of medical<lb/>
service.<lb/>
The present program here at East<lb/>
Carolina is the only accredited school in a<lb/>
five state area. Many universities and<lb/>
colleges offer courses and study of O.T.<lb/>
within their required curriculum, but do<lb/>
not offer a specific degree in the field.<lb/>
Students interested in pursuing a<lb/>
career in O.T. enter the program with the<lb/>
same General College requirements that<lb/>
all students must satisfy. During their<lb/>
first two years of study they do take some<lb/>
courses related to their major. Included in<lb/>
first two years of study are courses in<lb/>
Biology, Psychology, Sociology, and<lb/>
Anthropology ln tne Junior year' tne 0T-<lb/>
student s study for the first two quarters<lb/>
deals primarily with Anatomy and<lb/>
Physiology. Other quarters concentrate<lb/>
on the student's learning and application<lb/>
of the skills he will one day use as tools<lb/>
in therapy.<lb/>
The two final years of study, the<lb/>
student gets what is known as<lb/>
"pre-clinical" experience in which they get<lb/>
some observation experience and some<lb/>
experience in actually working with<lb/>
patients.<lb/>
During the senior year under the direct<lb/>
observation of registered therapists,<lb/>
students participate in the lab where they<lb/>
confront actual problems in applying their<lb/>
own skills and talents in helping patients,<lb/>
thus gaining valuable experience.<lb/>
After graduation the student may go<lb/>
on to obtain a MA. degree in<lb/>
Occupational Therapy. Fortunately, how-<lb/>
ever, for those graduates interested in<lb/>
going directly into the field, there are<lb/>
abundant job openings and opportunities.<lb/>
Today the demand for O.T. graduates is<lb/>
very great. Medical centers and hospitals,<lb/>
as well as rehabilitation centers offer<lb/>
unlimited opportunity for prospective<lb/>
therapist.<lb/>
The field of Occupational Therapy is a<lb/>
very exciting and challenging area. It<lb/>
deals directly with people and their<lb/>
problems. O.T. students often find<lb/>
themselves involved with projects and<lb/>
activities beyong their basic required<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
East Carolina is fortunate in having<lb/>
three registered Occupational Therapists<lb/>
within the program. The students work<lb/>
closely with their instructors and through<lb/>
observation and actual working experi-<lb/>
ences gain valuable practice which<lb/>
enables them to equip themselves to<lb/>
handle any situation involved in<lb/>
rehabilitation they may be confronted with<lb/>
in future worn.<lb/>
Perhaps the greatest problem facing<lb/>
the future of the Occupational Therapy<lb/>
program is the need to make the public,<lb/>
and medical people as well, completely<lb/>
understand the aims and objectives of the<lb/>
program. People must become aware of<lb/>
the fact that Occupational Therapy is not<lb/>
something which attempts to teach<lb/>
someone a skill, but rather uses a skill, an<lb/>
activity, and a genuine concern for<lb/>
helping people with all sorts of physical<lb/>
and mental problems overcome their<lb/>
problems and live their lives more<lb/>
normally.<lb/>
More importantly, O.Ts bring their<lb/>
� II il'lWUi" l I l "II ii � I l ri IIKl<lb/>
<lb/>
E<lb/>
in a I<lb/>
Gree<lb/>
O.T. STUDENTS Jimmy Johnson (I) and Tommy Bright (R) work with 10 year<lb/>
old midget Greg Bradly as a special outside project.<lb/>
own concern and compassion for the less<lb/>
fortunate into the contest. A contest<lb/>
whose rewards are sometimes as<lb/>
wonderful as seeing a paraplegic child<lb/>
master a simple everyday exercise, or a<lb/>
stroke patient learn to accomplish some<lb/>
small task that most take for granted. At<lb/>
times the frustration is great-as it is in<lb/>
any meaningful endeavor. Yet the rewards<lb/>
are unlimited, and make it all worthwhile<lb/>
as any O.T. will tell you.<lb/>
Presently the Occupational Therapy<lb/>
department here is involved in a money<lb/>
making project to raise funds for a<lb/>
scholarship to aid financially needy<lb/>
students. Dick Wells, chairman of the<lb/>
Occupational Therapy Department would<lb/>
welcome any interested students or<lb/>
persons who would like to find out more<lb/>
about the program to drop by his office in<lb/>
off-(<lb/>
<lb/>
by I<lb/>
avai<lb/>
for<lb/>
turn<lb/>
mar<lb/>
<lb/>
of i<lb/>
mer<lb/>
ing<lb/>
prol<lb/>
loot1<lb/>
pho<lb/>
corr<lb/>
bef<lb/>
Gre<lb/>
Fou<lb/>
find<lb/>
ofte<lb/>
I<lb/>
righ<lb/>
plac<lb/>
advi<lb/>
pah<lb/>
unil<lb/>
Fric<lb/>
bes<lb/>
the Allied Health building at any time<lb/>
    :rx<lb/>
Ptm&amp;tf<lb/>
HfW LOCATION COftNOI O<lb/>
Mi AN� COTAMCHI $TtHT<lb/>
TUESDAY fA<lb/>
Ovenburger, �1 jCM<lb/>
Salad, Drink h��<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Spaghetti (with<lb/>
Meat Sauce), Salad<lb/>
$139<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Free Ice Tea<lb/>
With All Meato<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Free Ice Tea<lb/>
With All Meals<lb/>
FRIDAY " <lb/>
Ovenburfer, $1 -HI:<lb/>
Salad, Drink ��vv<lb/>
Phone 752 7483<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
5 PM-11 P.M. 7 Day<lb/>
HX��<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0005"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
"herapy<lb/>
money<lb/>
for a<lb/>
needy<lb/>
of the<lb/>
would<lb/>
its or<lb/>
t more<lb/>
ffice in<lb/>
ne.<lb/>
S<lb/>
N<lb/>
i<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
5<lb/>
�P<lb/>
Students face varied problems<lb/>
in making move off-campus<lb/>
Editor's Note: This is the first article<lb/>
in a four part series concerning housing in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
By ED HERRING<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
Student A has decided to live<lb/>
off-campus.<lb/>
A number of questions must be faced<lb/>
by Student A. What type of housing is<lb/>
available? How much can I afford to pay<lb/>
for rent? Should the dwelling be<lb/>
furnished or unfurnished? What sex and<lb/>
marital statuses must I fulfill?<lb/>
Student A can choose from four types<lb/>
of housing in the Greenville area: apart-<lb/>
ments, houses, rooms and trailers. Find-<lb/>
ing out what is available can present a<lb/>
problem for the student. Student A could<lb/>
look in the yellow pages of the Greenville<lb/>
phone book. The larger apartment<lb/>
complexes and real estate agencies can<lb/>
be found here.<lb/>
The classified ad sections of the<lb/>
Greenville Daily Reflector and the<lb/>
Fountainhead might prove helpful in<lb/>
finding housing. Campus bulletin boards<lb/>
often list rooms or "roommates wanted<lb/>
In most cases, however, knowing the<lb/>
right people is the best way to find a<lb/>
place to live. Many landlords do not<lb/>
advertise their rental property. This is<lb/>
particularly in the case of small apartment<lb/>
units, houses, rooms and trailers.<lb/>
Friends or friends of friends are often the<lb/>
best sources of information on housing<lb/>
availabilities.<lb/>
The ECU Housing Office can prove<lb/>
helpful to Student A, particularly in<lb/>
search for rooms. The office has a list of<lb/>
off-campus rooms for men and<lb/>
women. An apartment list is also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
has compiled a booklet of some of the<lb/>
rooms and apartments which are available<lb/>
to students.<lb/>
When looking into off-campus<lb/>
housing, cost should be a primary<lb/>
concer, of Student A. Rent may range<lb/>
from $25 I )r a room to $190 a month for a<lb/>
plush apartment. The rent may include<lb/>
the cost of utilities, but more often than<lb/>
not, the utility bill will be paid by the<lb/>
tenant.<lb/>
The utility bill pays the cost of<lb/>
electricity, water, sewage and often<lb/>
gas. A $35 deposit is required before<lb/>
these utilities will even be turned on.<lb/>
Often the utility bill will be high<lb/>
because air conditioners and heating are<lb/>
run by electricity. If however, the<lb/>
dwelling is not heated by electricity, the<lb/>
student will be faced with another bill and<lb/>
another problem.<lb/>
Many dwellings are heated by oil or<lb/>
kerosene burners. Student A must find an<lb/>
oil dealer to service his home. With the<lb/>
fuel shortage, this is becoming<lb/>
increasingly difficult especially for new<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
Distance from campus is another<lb/>
problem which Student A is confronted<lb/>
with. Do I have a car or a bike? If not, the<lb/>
student must find a place within walking<lb/>
distance of campus.<lb/>
If Student A has chosen a dwelling<lb/>
which is unfurnished, he is faced with<lb/>
still another expense. This problem can<lb/>
be lessened if the student checks all<lb/>
possible outlets before purchasing<lb/>
furniture.<lb/>
Student A can go to retail furniture<lb/>
dealers in Greenville but this could prove<lb/>
extremely expensive. Often the classified<lb/>
ads may be helpful in locating<lb/>
furniture. Yard sales and auctionc sell<lb/>
inexpensive furnishings. Many mobile<lb/>
home dealers in the area sell second-hand<lb/>
furniture. Student A should also check<lb/>
with friends and relatives when<lb/>
attempting to locate furniture.<lb/>
Although the student faces many<lb/>
problems when attempting to find<lb/>
housing, usually he is renting for the first<lb/>
time and is therefore faced with many new<lb/>
responsibilities.<lb/>
(Next:Legal technicalities)<lb/>
Business<lb/>
fellowships<lb/>
are offered<lb/>
Graduate business fellowships for<lb/>
minority students are available through<lb/>
the UNC School of Business Adminis-<lb/>
tration in CHapel Hill.<lb/>
Blacks, American Indians and<lb/>
Spanish-surnamed Americans are eligible<lb/>
for the fellowships which provide tuition<lb/>
and living allowance of $2,000 for the first<lb/>
year of the master of business<lb/>
administration (M.B.A.) program and<lb/>
$1,000 for the second year.<lb/>
Financed by grants from 135 U.S.<lb/>
corporations, the fellowships are spon-<lb/>
sored by the Consortium for Graduate<lb/>
Study in Management which UNC joined<lb/>
in January. The Consortium is a<lb/>
six-university program to encourage<lb/>
minority men and women to enter<lb/>
management careers in business. In<lb/>
addition to UNC, it includes Indiana<lb/>
University, Washington University in St.<lb/>
Louis and the Universities of Rochester,<lb/>
Southern California and Wisconsin.<lb/>
Students may apply to the M.B.A.<lb/>
program of any Consortium universities.<lb/>
Thirteen fellows are enrolled now at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Persons wishing further information<lb/>
should write to the director, Consortium<lb/>
for Graduate Study in Management, 101<lb/>
N. Skinker Blvd Box 1132, St. Louis,<lb/>
Mo. 63130; or executive director, M.B.A.<lb/>
Program, UNC School of Business,<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. <lb/>
!��������������������!<lb/>
�<lb/>
THE YEARBOOKS ARE HERE - SO ARE<lb/>
THE YEARBOOK PHOTOGRAPHERS<lb/>
<lb/>
Portraits May Be Made Monday Through<lb/>
Friday, 9:00-12:00, 1:00-5:00 In Room 305,<lb/>
Wright Annex.<lb/>
WHY SENIORS SHOULD HAVE THEIR<lb/>
YEARBOOK PICTURES TAKEN:<lb/>
(1) You will need wallet-sized photographs<lb/>
for job applications. Yearbook pictures can<lb/>
be ordered at low cost from the yearbook<lb/>
photographer without the sitting fee and<lb/>
time factor involved in having portraits<lb/>
made elsewhere.<lb/>
(2) The faculty use the yearbook portraits to<lb/>
"refresh their memories" as to who is who<lb/>
when countless job recommendations are<lb/>
sent to them.<lb/>
Yearbooks Distributed Starting Monday, December 3, from 9:00-5:00<lb/>
between Jarvis and Fleming (if weather permits-in jJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
mt0m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtm<lb/>
EditortalsyODrrnienlary<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
All about chaos<lb/>
America's self-pity derided<lb/>
This could be the last issue of Fountainhead you read. In fact, according to SGA<lb/>
President Bill Bodenhamer, last Thursday's issue was supposed to be the grand finale<lb/>
until further notice. Surprise.<lb/>
The reason? On Nov. 12, the SGA Legislature passed an $87,000 appropriations bill<lb/>
for the Publications Board, financing the Buccaneer, Fountainhead and the Rebel. This<lb/>
bill was universally regarded as "Bodenhamer's bill he had proposed the budgets,<lb/>
discussed cuts with the editors, and was alive and conscious in the room when the bill<lb/>
was passed.<lb/>
However, Mr. Bodenhamer didn't receive a formal copy of the bill, nor did he sign<lb/>
it. The SGA Constitution states only that a president may veto a bill within ten days; it<lb/>
does not state that a president's signature is necessary to make law of a bill passed by<lb/>
the Legislature. Mr. Bodenhamer araues that his signature makes law, and that<lb/>
the unsigned Pub Board bill is inoperable and illegal.<lb/>
The bill was passed on Nov. 12. Just last week Mr. Bodenhamer voiced his<lb/>
procedural complaint. We are incredulous that Mr. Bodenhamer could wish to dispute<lb/>
his own bill. Either he has lost his sanity and perspective, has developed an alternative<lb/>
motive, or is attempting to hang all publications at once.<lb/>
The second motive seems strongest. After acquiring its budget, the Pub Board<lb/>
acquired the services of SGA photographer Guy Cox. Cox had been employed by the<lb/>
Executive Council to take photographs for the Council and for student publications. On<lb/>
Nov 28, he resigned from the SGA and became a Pub Board employee. In losing the<lb/>
photographer, Mr. Bodenhamer also lost a means of embellishing his scrapbook with<lb/>
pictures taken by an SGA employee. SGA-watchers inform us that Mr. Bodenhamer's<lb/>
anger on this subject surfaced as a massive gripe against the Pub Board bill.<lb/>
This past Friday, Mr. Bodenhamer requested that the Vice-Chancel lor for Business<lb/>
Affairs freeze SGA funds. This was done. Mr. Bodenhamer also informed<lb/>
Fountainhead that there wouldn't be a newspaper today. There is one. All SGA<lb/>
monies, all publications budgets, are frozen; we're as good as broke. We are,<lb/>
technically speaking, operating on nothing.<lb/>
So why are we here?<lb/>
Once the SGA funds were turned over to the Publications Board on Oct. 17, they<lb/>
became property of that Board and left Mr. Bodenhamer's jurisdiction. To freeze them<lb/>
is, in our opinion, illegal and a usurpation of Pub Board powers. Second, the SGA<lb/>
Constitution does not declare that the president's signature makes a bill law. The state<lb/>
only that a president has ten days in which to veto .to quote SGA Attorney General<lb/>
Tom Clare, "This jerves adequately as a checking for possible Legislative abuses<lb/>
We feel in failing to regard the Legislature's bill as law, and in going over that<lb/>
body's head to the Administration in declaring a freeze, Mr. Bodenhamer has slapped<lb/>
the Legislature squarely in the face. In freezing Pub Board funds, he has shown<lb/>
complete disregard and disrespect for the Board. In short, Fountainhead views Mr.<lb/>
Bodenhamer's actions as inoperative and disrespectful of student intelligence. We<lb/>
respect law, but we don't make it up as we go along - and Fountainhead rejects this<lb/>
sort of ad-libbed lunacy.<lb/>
At this point, we'd like to recall the many times Mr. Bodenhamer has stated<lb/>
Fountainhead didn't give him a fair shake. We have not specialized in criticism. Our<lb/>
editorials have been, for the most part, philosophical. When anti-SGA bias was pointed<lb/>
out in stories, we sought to correct it. Mr. Bodenhamer's SGA has gotten more news<lb/>
space than any SGA in our four-year memory. And, if you will read the letter titled<lb/>
"Catching Flak" on page 7, we have even been accused of SGA favoritism.<lb/>
We have, in other words, been rather reasonable and remarkably unlike a student<lb/>
newspaper. We do not criticize unless we are badly stung, and the time has<lb/>
arrived. Were we any more solicitous than we have been in the past, we would be a<lb/>
house organ of the SGA, not a student newspaper. In advising us not to print, Mr.<lb/>
Bodenhamer has also attempted a subtle form of censorship<lb/>
This editor is non-warlike and rather patient, but this is too much. This publicationi<lb/>
is not for Mr. Bodenhamer or the SGA alone. We are interested in producing<lb/>
semi-weekly newspapers, not in playing games with student government. We are a<lb/>
student service and therefore are under an ethical contract to print. Regardless of what<lb/>
the SGA likes or doesn't like, the student attitude toward Fountainhead has been<lb/>
excellent; that's all that counts.<lb/>
And so we are printing.<lb/>
SOT<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
MANAGING EDITORSklp "<lb/>
AD MANAGERPsrri Morgan<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERRk Gilliam<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSDarrsil Williams<lb/>
Diana Taylor<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORStave Bohmuller<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
ADVISORDr. Frank J. Murphy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student<lb/>
of East Carolina University and<lb/>
�sen Tuesday and Thursday of<lb/>
ths school yssr.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial offtoss: 7584386, 758-6367<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-<lb/>
student<lb/>
ssssssmfii i USJ � I nil � i<lb/>
�<lb/>
By SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER<lb/>
In my opinion, the American<lb/>
people have spent far too much time and<lb/>
energy deploring the acts of government<lb/>
officials and treating themselves to<lb/>
binges of self-pity.<lb/>
In fact, many of us have spent most of<lb/>
the 1973 accenting the negative. We have<lb/>
elevated the stupid, inexcusable criminal<lb/>
acts of the Watergate scandal to level so<lb/>
high that they blind us to more important<lb/>
aspects of our existence.<lb/>
It is my hope that the holiday season<lb/>
encompassed by Thanksgiving, Christmas<lb/>
and New Year's will give all of us a chance<lb/>
to gain a better perspective on what the<lb/>
scandals in government mean, just where<lb/>
we stand as a people as a result of them<lb/>
and on what the future holds and how we<lb/>
shall confront it. And I would hope and<lb/>
pray that all Americans would find time<lb/>
during this season of joy nd hope and<lb/>
peace to count their tremendous stock of<lb/>
blessings.<lb/>
It is not my intention here to suggest<lb/>
that the nation forget about the<lb/>
irregularities of Watergate and attendant<lb/>
scandals. I am not saying that these<lb/>
things are unimportant and should be<lb/>
dropped because there is a need for more<lb/>
optimism and hope on the part of the<lb/>
American people.<lb/>
All of us feel deeply saddened and<lb/>
greatly frustrated to hear charges<lb/>
involving the betrayal of public trust by<lb/>
high officials of our government. But that<lb/>
certainly does not mean that the world is<lb/>
coming to an end, that the United States<lb/>
will cease to survive as a nation or that<lb/>
our democratic form of government is<lb/>
doomed. In fact, I personally am fed up<lb/>
with predictions of disaster stemming<lb/>
from the Watergate irregularities. To hear<lb/>
and read some critics of the government<lb/>
hold forth on the subject of Watergate,<lb/>
you get the impression that the only thing<lb/>
that might help now would be to junk the<lb/>
Constitution, impeach everyone in the<lb/>
federal government and move on to some<lb/>
fanciful scheme concocted in the minds<lb/>
of those who always seem to preach but<lb/>
never participate in the affairs of<lb/>
government.<lb/>
We have problems in this country, and<lb/>
they are not small ones. We do have a<lb/>
crisis of confidence in the federal<lb/>
government and we do have an energy<lb/>
shortage of formidable proportions<lb/>
bearing down on us. But these are things<lb/>
that we have faced before and faced<lb/>
successfully.<lb/>
It isn't too much to ask that we take<lb/>
more than a few minutes to offer a<lb/>
blessing and acknowledge one basic<lb/>
factthat, despite the Watergate scandal,<lb/>
despite the energy shortage, despite the<lb/>
existence of international troubled spots,<lb/>
despite the continued existence of poverty<lb/>
and health problems among our people,<lb/>
despite the high rate of inflation "that we<lb/>
still have it better than anyone else on the<lb/>
face of the earth<lb/>
Our trouble seems to be that we don't<lb/>
judge our present condition with what<lb/>
went before. Let me just say to all those<lb/>
people now complaining about a 50-mile<lb/>
motor speed limit on the highways that it<lb/>
was not so many years ago that very few<lb/>
Americans had ever traveled that fast. In<lb/>
fact, a man named Barney Oldfield<lb/>
became famous early in the century<lb/>
because he was one of the first human<lb/>
beings to travel a mile a minuteor 60<lb/>
miles an hour. In my youth, the name<lb/>
Barney Oldfield was synonymous with<lb/>
great speed Continued on psgs 7.<lb/>
"THANK MDU M. PRESIDENT, TOR THOSE INSPIRING WORDS OM<lb/>
TME EMERGy CRISIS<lb/>
GoWv<lb/>
A new pi<lb/>
testimony and o<lb/>
secret and in con<lb/>
agencies of the g<lb/>
of the more net<lb/>
Watergate scanda<lb/>
What's more, I<lb/>
gaining some de<lb/>
the public mind ai<lb/>
- some officials.<lb/>
- The procedun<lb/>
consists of pre<lb/>
secret informatio<lb/>
transcripts of tes<lb/>
testimony taker<lb/>
executive session<lb/>
the results in p<lb/>
, promise to<lb/>
investigation of t<lb/>
But despite<lb/>
investigators z<lb/>
"leakage" goes<lb/>
Senate Waterga<lb/>
Department of Ji<lb/>
attorneys in Mai<lb/>
the country and<lb/>
special prosecut<lb/>
these are not the<lb/>
House and ev<lb/>
hearing indict<lb/>
closed doors he<lb/>
for many news j<lb/>
Since the I<lb/>
Agnew, ITT, r<lb/>
investigations<lb/>
mere trickle tc<lb/>
strange attituck<lb/>
seems to be<lb/>
officials who<lb/>
believe the ace<lb/>
the 1972 elect io<lb/>
Throughout<lb/>
campaign in 11<lb/>
making a pract<lb/>
The Washingtc<lb/>
Times, News<lb/>
magazine and<lb/>
This was obvio<lb/>
naterial being<lb/>
in all instanc<lb/>
authoritative I<lb/>
close to the in<lb/>
Scarcely o<lb/>
was voiced<lb/>
sessions that<lb/>
way into print<lb/>
on radio and<lb/>
brought nur<lb/>
witnesses wh<lb/>
session, all c<lb/>
been testifyir<lb/>
they were led<lb/>
staff member<lb/>
y, every tin<lb/>
raised, Charii<lb/>
his committe<lb/>
their heads, (<lb/>
any responj<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Later, wh<lb/>
in Baltimore<lb/>
Justice and<lb/>
systematical!<lb/>
case agains<lb/>
Agnew, the<lb/>
investigation<lb/>
Richardson c<lb/>
of the wholt<lb/>
even ackno1<lb/>
Department f<lb/>
of the leaks<lb/>
information,<lb/>
highest offic<lb/>
convicted in<lb/>
single form,<lb/>
against him i<lb/>
the judicial<lb/>
hear a.repon<lb/>
"leaks<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 19TO<lb/>
7<lb/>
GoMwater TheForUrin<lb/>
Continued from page 6. e" '��<lb/>
A new procedure for "leaking"<lb/>
testimony and other evidence given in<lb/>
secret and in confidence to investigatory<lb/>
agencies of the government has been one<lb/>
of the more negative products of the<lb/>
Watergate scandal.<lb/>
What's more, the practice seems to be<lb/>
gaining some degree of acceptability in<lb/>
the public mind and in the consciences of<lb/>
- some officials. M<lb/>
- The procedure is simplicity itself, it<lb/>
consists of providing newsmen with<lb/>
secret information-in some cases actual<lb/>
transcripts of testimony or summaries of<lb/>
testimony taken from witnesses in<lb/>
executive sessions- and then deploring<lb/>
the results in public statements which<lb/>
.promise to conduct a thorough<lb/>
investigation of the "leaks<lb/>
But despite all the disclaimers by<lb/>
investigators and prosecutors, the<lb/>
"leakage" goes on unchecked-in tne<lb/>
Senate Watergate committee, the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Justice, the offices of U.S.<lb/>
attorneys in Maryland and other parts ot<lb/>
the country and the office of the former<lb/>
special prosecutor in the Watergate. And<lb/>
these are not the only sources. Tne White<lb/>
House and even some grand Junes<lb/>
hearing indictable testimony behind<lb/>
closed doors have provided the material<lb/>
for many news stories.<lb/>
Since the leaks in the Watergate<lb/>
Agnew, ITT, milk funds and related<lb/>
investigations have developed frorri a<lb/>
mere trickle to a genuine flood, tnis<lb/>
strange attitude of qualified acceptance<lb/>
seems to be seizing more and more<lb/>
(officials who should know belter. I<lb/>
I believe the acceptance is rooted in tne<lb/>
the 1972 election<lb/>
Throughout the entire political<lb/>
campaign in 1972, public officials were<lb/>
making a practice of leaking n6"3! �<lb/>
The Washington Post, the New York<lb/>
Times, Newsweek magazine, Time<lb/>
magazine and many other publications.<lb/>
This was obvious from the nature of the<lb/>
naterial being published and, of course,<lb/>
,n all instances it was attributed to<lb/>
authoritative but unidentified sources<lb/>
close to the investigation.<lb/>
Scarcely one word of any news value<lb/>
was voiced in these so-called secret<lb/>
sessions that did not immediately find its<lb/>
way into print or into news commentaries<lb/>
on radio and television. This, of course,<lb/>
brought numerous complaints from<lb/>
witnesses who later appeared in public<lb/>
session, all of whom felt that they had<lb/>
been testifying in confidence and said<lb/>
they were led to understand that by the<lb/>
staff members of the committee. Natural-<lb/>
ly every time these complaints were<lb/>
raised, Chariman Ervin and members of<lb/>
his committee took time out to shake<lb/>
their heads, deplore the practice, disown<lb/>
any responsibility and promise an<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Later, when the U.S. attorneys office<lb/>
in Baltimore and the Department of<lb/>
Justice and the White House began<lb/>
systematically "leaking" details of the<lb/>
case against former Vice President<lb/>
Agnew, the White House called for an<lb/>
investigation and former Atty. Gen. Elliot<lb/>
Richardson pledged to get to the bottom<lb/>
of the whole matter. At one point, he<lb/>
even acknowledged that the Justice<lb/>
Department had to be the source of some<lb/>
of the leaks because of the nature of the<lb/>
information. In all events, the second<lb/>
highest officer in the land was tried and<lb/>
convicted in the public press beforea<lb/>
single formal charge had been placed<lb/>
against him in the appropriate agencies of<lb/>
the judicial system. And we have yet to<lb/>
hear a,report on the investigations of the<lb/>
"leaks<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to<lb/>
express their " )��?:<lb/>
Letters should bs signed by the euthoelsl,<lb/>
names will be withheld on "�� Un-<lb/>
signed ettoiWs on tres peg on ��<lb/>
editorial pegs reflect"iJL<lb/>
editor, and ere not necessarily those ol<lb/>
FOUMT7UNHEAD reserves the right to<lb/>
refuse printing m Instances of IJ or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment as an<lb/>
I1 52 u JShTonlyln<lb/>
Issues. A newipeper bWm only in<lb/>
proportion to Its autonomy.<lb/>
Drug letter<lb/>
To the Drug Informers:<lb/>
When you bust someone you may be<lb/>
getting your parking tickets fixed, but you<lb/>
are messing up someone's life.<lb/>
P.T.A.<lb/>
(Professional Tokers Association)<lb/>
Seriously folks, what's the buzz?<lb/>
Those articles were nothing but a waste of<lb/>
paper. At first I thought I was reading a<lb/>
satire but much to my dismay I was told,<lb/>
"no they're serious It seems to me the<lb/>
whole drug issue is an overused topic and<lb/>
a college campus of all places is not the<lb/>
ideal spot to go around trying to bust<lb/>
people. Arresting people for marijuana<lb/>
will not solve anything for the simple fact<lb/>
that too many people smoke it. If the<lb/>
campus police and various informers wan<lb/>
to get their rocks off let them do their bit<lb/>
for society by playing "mod squad" out on<lb/>
the streets and stop the real drug<lb/>
traffic. Let's face it people, marijuana is<lb/>
here to stay and arresting people only<lb/>
causes more "problems<lb/>
By the way if there are such things as<lb/>
informers, I'd like to emphasize the word<lb/>
hazardous with regards to their job and<lb/>
for those who get actual "enjoyment<lb/>
from busting people I recommend<lb/>
psychiatric help. Think about it wont<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Dead Head<lb/>
Voiks finale<lb/>
Catching flak<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Either you should check over your<lb/>
journalism studies, or you have made an<lb/>
attempt to beautify King Billie and his<lb/>
court of jesters.<lb/>
A front page article in your Tues. Nov.<lb/>
6 edition, headlined with "Bin will<lb/>
investigate Tenth Street Intersects<lb/>
Aha! Has King Billie come up with<lb/>
something? But gamine closer. In the<lb/>
story you state that L-R 3-1 by D.O.<lb/>
Dixon "was passed and will be sent to the<lb/>
North Carolina Department of Transport-<lb/>
ation as a request for an investigation of<lb/>
the problems of crossing the inter-<lb/>
section It is stated only as a request for<lb/>
investigation. It doesn't mean that an<lb/>
investigation will follow the S.G.A. s or<lb/>
other requests. Your headline and story<lb/>
contract each other. Either prfread<lb/>
your atricles more closely or stop being<lb/>
biased, such as a half-hearted attempt to<lb/>
qlorify King Billie.<lb/>
Actually the bill is a good if no<lb/>
excellent idea, but state the facts people!<lb/>
A Dedicated Member of<lb/>
The Blue Light Bill<lb/>
Fan Club<lb/>
Informer's life<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to comment on your awe<lb/>
inspiring articles entitled, "Informers life<lb/>
can be hazardous" and "Informers control<lb/>
narcotics sale<lb/>
I really found your articles education-<lb/>
al Never before had I realized that ALL<lb/>
people dealing narcotics were sons ofa<lb/>
bitch; that a thing called an informer<lb/>
roams our campus; and finally a sigh of<lb/>
relief because Mr. Wiggins will be the e<lb/>
when an arrest is made in order to help<lb/>
the student.<lb/>
The following two letters<lb/>
forwarded to us by Joe Pi<lb/>
Volkswagon. In the issue of 30 October,<lb/>
Stewart Pope claimed unfair treatment by<lb/>
Pechetes in the inspection ol his<lb/>
Volkswagon. Since that time, Pechelee<lb/>
Volkswagon received this judgement In<lb/>
the case from the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Motor Vehicles, and sent Mr. Pope letter<lb/>
number 2.<lb/>
Mr. J.G. Wilson, Safety Administrator<lb/>
N C. Department of Motor Vehicles<lb/>
License and Theft Division<lb/>
Raleigh, North Carolina 27611<lb/>
Dear Mr. Wilson:<lb/>
Re- Safety Inspection Complaint onJoe<lb/>
Pecheles Motors, Inc. Station No. 7323<lb/>
This letter is in response toa<lb/>
complaint received on October 22, 1973,<lb/>
from Mr. Stewart R. Pope, 1203 East Fifth<lb/>
Street, Greenville, North Carolina. At-<lb/>
tached please find a copy ofhe<lb/>
complaint I received on Joe heles<lb/>
Motors, Inc. As you will note, Mr Pope<lb/>
stated or listed six (6) items which the<lb/>
mechanic at this dealership said needed<lb/>
repairing. Mr. Pope also stated in his<lb/>
letter that it was not necessary to place a<lb/>
car on a rack to be safety inspected.<lb/>
On November 7, 1973, I met with Mr.<lb/>
Pope at Joe Pecheles Motors, Inc. to<lb/>
determine if Mr. Pope's complaint was<lb/>
justified. Included in the list of repairs<lb/>
made by this dealership were as<lb/>
follows: king and link needed adjusting,<lb/>
brakes needed adjusting, right tie rodeno<lb/>
needed replacement, wiper blades needed<lb/>
replacement, left parking light was burned<lb/>
out, and headlights needed adjusting<lb/>
On November 7, 1973,1 checked this<lb/>
vehicle. The king and link on this 1964<lb/>
Volkswagon did need adjusting. The right<lb/>
tie rod end was very loose. Two<lb/>
windshield wiper blades were torn and<lb/>
ragged. The left parking light was still out<lb/>
at this time. The headlights could not be<lb/>
checked as the Weaver headlight aimer<lb/>
had been sent off for repairs. Mr Pope<lb/>
observed these items I have just<lb/>
mentioned and at the conclusion ofoor<lb/>
meeting he was in agreement that all of<lb/>
the repairs with the except ion of the<lb/>
headlights were as Mr. Pecheles<lb/>
mechanic had stated-either needed repair<lb/>
or replacement.<lb/>
Upon further talking with Mr. Pope,<lb/>
he stated that he had his vehicle<lb/>
inspected in Raleigh by European Auto<lb/>
Service Center, Station No. 7759. Tne<lb/>
vehicle was inspected by a mechanth<lb/>
the last name of Harris. Safety Inspection<lb/>
Certificate No. 2961357 was issued to h s<lb/>
vehicle. Mr. Pope said that this<lb/>
inspection station only charged him for<lb/>
adjusting the brakes.<lb/>
It is my opinion after examining tnis<lb/>
vehicle that Mr. Pope's complaint against<lb/>
Joe Pecheles Motors, Inc. was not valid,<lb/>
and I recommend that no action be taken<lb/>
against this dealership. I do recorrtfnent<lb/>
that European Auto Service Center be<lb/>
investigated as you see necessary for me<lb/>
omissions on the inspection they<lb/>
performed on Mr. Pope's vehicle.<lb/>
r Yours truly,<lb/>
J.J. Langston<lb/>
Inspector<lb/>
Letter number 2:<lb/>
Stewart R. Pope<lb/>
1203 East Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Dear Mr. Pope:<lb/>
I am writing in reference to our<lb/>
meeting, which was held in my officeiwith<lb/>
MrJ J Langston of the North Carolina<lb/>
License and Theft Division, you and<lb/>
my As stated in Mr. Langston's letter<lb/>
dated November 8, 1973, you were<lb/>
advised that Joe Pecheles Motorsinot<lb/>
guilty of any wrong doing and that your<lb/>
complaint was not valid on any<lb/>
grounds. You were also advised that Joe<lb/>
Pecheles Motors could and srdtoj<lb/>
charged you with services rendered, or<lb/>
which not a penny was charged for their<lb/>
work and time given to you.<lb/>
You also agreed on your partto<lb/>
forward a letter to the people concerned,<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
A-Fountainhead Newspaper<lb/>
B-Greenville Chamber of Ommeroe<lb/>
C-N.C. Department of Motor Vehtales,<lb/>
License and Theft Division Att: Mr. G. L.<lb/>
Beddard <lb/>
retracting your malicious and slander-<lb/>
ous statements of which were uncalled<lb/>
f0We were under the impression thatwe<lb/>
were dealing with a mature young mar,<lb/>
who would stand on his word ana<lb/>
agreement.<lb/>
Please advise. .<lb/>
joe Pecheles Motors, Inc.<lb/>
Jor Pecheles, President<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
wmmmimmm<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
Records<lb/>
"WISHBONE ASH - Live Dates"<lb/>
BY. J.K. LOFTEN<lb/>
The material on the album is all<lb/>
original except for one old Everly Brothers<lb/>
song, "Baby What You Want Me To<lb/>
Do "Lady Whiskey" and "Phoenix"<lb/>
appear from the first album while<lb/>
"pilgrim" and "Jail Bait" come to us off of<lb/>
their most experimental album Pilgri-<lb/>
mage. Another song from Argus,<lb/>
"Blowin' Free boogies right along with a<lb/>
light energy characteristic of four guys<lb/>
who love to play together. Finally, "Rock<lb/>
n' Roll Widow" and "Ballad of the<lb/>
Beacon" give the listener a taste of their<lb/>
last studio work.<lb/>
Wishbone Ash has for the past three<lb/>
or four years been one of those groups<lb/>
that despite their talent and ability has<lb/>
been relatively unknown. Granted that<lb/>
through their first four albums they have<lb/>
acquired a rabid following, it has<lb/>
nonetheless been a small one. With the<lb/>
debut of this album, it seems as though<lb/>
they will finally receive some of the<lb/>
recognition due them, in a manner similar<lb/>
to what a live album did for the Allman<lb/>
� Brothers Band.<lb/>
Rocking when it needs to be, smooth<lb/>
when it should be, spacey when it helps<lb/>
to be and good all the way through, Live<lb/>
Dates by Wishbone Ash is one of the<lb/>
finest live albums as well as one of the<lb/>
best anthologies to be presented to the<lb/>
record buying public for a good while.<lb/>
Recorded during a tour of England<lb/>
during June of this year, this album is<lb/>
basically a collection of songs recorded<lb/>
by them previously. This alone would be<lb/>
reason enough for anyone to buy the<lb/>
album, for the tracks included represent<lb/>
the best from their previous albums with<lb/>
one big difference: they're better! Any-<lb/>
one who has heard any of these cuts on<lb/>
their previous albums (Wishbone Ash,<lb/>
Pilgrimage, Argus, Wishbone Four) will<lb/>
agree that while remaining true to the<lb/>
original, these live cuts have that extra<lb/>
energy and imagination that live<lb/>
performances need.<lb/>
Wishbone Ash's material is definitely<lb/>
English, being influenced by Elizabethan<lb/>
and traditional folk ballads while at the<lb/>
same time have a taste of modem<lb/>
jazz. Combining these influences with<lb/>
rock n' roll we can see a group that can<lb/>
boogie with taste, control and sense of<lb/>
knowing what to do and when to do<lb/>
it. One of the strongest identification<lb/>
points of the band is their dual guitar<lb/>
harmonies which they developed about<lb/>
the same time as the original Allman<lb/>
Brothers. Working with two lead guitars<lb/>
and a bass that sometimes acts as a third<lb/>
lead, they present a distinctively<lb/>
entertaining musical presentation.<lb/>
SELLING ENGLAND BY THE POUND<lb/>
Genesis.<lb/>
By "NIGHTSPORF'<lb/>
Selling England By The Pound<lb/>
Genesis are a British concert<lb/>
band. They are not a rock and roll<lb/>
band. Their material follows along the<lb/>
same musical lines as that of King<lb/>
Crimson. They work within song format,<lb/>
resembling the early work of the<lb/>
Nice. Genesis are also in musical<lb/>
agreement with Yes (less harshness and<lb/>
volume-more flowing). The first Procol<lb/>
Harum album (especially "She wandered<lb/>
through the Garden Fence), and, at times,<lb/>
Rare Bird.<lb/>
The focus for their stage presentation<lb/>
is Peter Gabriel, the singer (who<lb/>
sometimes plays flute and oboe - he<lb/>
played flute on Cat Stevens' Mona Bone<lb/>
Jakon Ip). Peter wears costumes which<lb/>
cause him to be identified with the main<lb/>
characters of the songs, which concern<lb/>
things like jack-in-the-boxes which have<lb/>
the heads of decapitated friends as the<lb/>
jacks. Other members of the band play<lb/>
guitar, bass, drums, and keyboards,<lb/>
including piano, organ, moog, and<lb/>
mellotror The music is not dominated by<lb/>
any one instrument although Tony Banks'<lb/>
mellotron provides a full orchestral sound<lb/>
complementing the playing of the other<lb/>
instrumentalists.<lb/>
Selling England by the Pound is<lb/>
Genesis' sixth album. From Genesis to<lb/>
Revelation (England only), Tresspass,<lb/>
Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot and Genesis-Live<lb/>
(England only) are the others. Tresspass<lb/>
is fair, Nursery Cryme is good (although<lb/>
the sound is muddled due to poor<lb/>
mixing), Foxtrot was one of my five<lb/>
favorite albums of last year, and<lb/>
Genesis-Live is very well done, the<lb/>
recording, the mixing, and the<lb/>
performance are all very good.<lb/>
Selling England by the Pound is a<lb/>
natural progression for Genesis. It<lb/>
continues their involvement with fantasy<lb/>
and fairy tales. The strange voices and<lb/>
?urns of phrase are still there. Banks<lb/>
plays moog for the first time. Firth of<lb/>
Fifth has a guitar solo which reminds me<lb/>
of Robert Fripp's solo during "In The<lb/>
Wake of Poseidon<lb/>
Genesis is on the verge of becoming a<lb/>
first-rate concert band. Musically similar<lb/>
in scone to King Crimson and Yes they<lb/>
have a waiting audience. If Slade are the<lb/>
Rolling Stones of Today, Genesis are the<lb/>
Pink Floyd.<lb/>
ED: I personally find myself thrilled<lb/>
by it but I won't say that it's better than<lb/>
Foxtrot.<lb/>
NEM: I like this album a lot. It has<lb/>
some very good moments. Genesis fills<lb/>
in the puzzle of people I like specially.<lb/>
Selling England is good but it is too<lb/>
new for me to say if it's better than<lb/>
Foxtrot. It has a good chance but Foxtrot<lb/>
was a masterpiece.<lb/>
jUDI PULVER: PULVER RISING<lb/>
This album is, to put it mildly,<lb/>
rather unusual. The back cover, showing<lb/>
a white-satin-and-plumed-earth-mother<lb/>
Pulver, seated next to a stuffed swan,<lb/>
gives some inkling as to the exotic<lb/>
contents of the album.<lb/>
Pulver has a huge, powerful, gutsy<lb/>
voice the size of which we have never<lb/>
heard before-a kind of Joplin ten<lb/>
times. Refreshingly, the lady sinr with a<lb/>
decidedly urban-New York accent, and the<lb/>
material reflects a great deal of wit,<lb/>
what-the-hell-ness, and an urban feel<lb/>
usually .absent from singers in today's<lb/>
country music kick<lb/>
Well I need a part-time woman<lb/>
One who doesn't want to stay;<lb/>
Who'll love me when I'm ready, who will<lb/>
love me when I say<lb/>
I want you now, but don't be there when I<lb/>
look up.<lb/>
("Part Time Woman Pulver)<lb/>
In 'Fish-Eye Blues with its extensive<lb/>
narration, Pulver pulls through as a<lb/>
consummate, happily-ham actress: "And<lb/>
you're feelin' all lonely like the clams and<lb/>
the conchaSo that even Starkist, man.<lb/>
don't wan'cha Pulver writes and<lb/>
Pulver sings slow, fast, funny,<lb/>
tongue-in-cheek country, and in "Silver<lb/>
Spoon plays the part of a lovesick city<lb/>
girl gone rural. Her voice is compelling,<lb/>
her style off-the-cuff and, at times,<lb/>
humorous. She's big, emotional and<lb/>
pleasantly excessive.<lb/>
Perhaps, in closing, the best way to<lb/>
describe this lady is as sophisticated<lb/>
Peppermint Patty grown up, full of vocal<lb/>
cracks, happy excesses, and a rough sort<lb/>
of natural warmth; she's at her best wher.<lb/>
left alone, as in "Be Long (She Don't<lb/>
Know)" or "Dancing on the Moon" - when<lb/>
the band doesn't challenge her with the<lb/>
musical ultimatum described earlier. Pul-<lb/>
vers easygoing, forthright and comfort-<lb/>
able, everyone's blunt best friend, and we<lb/>
look forward to her next album.<lb/>
This reviewer has only one<lb/>
criticism .MGM has done a consum-<lb/>
�mate job of selling Pulver, and the<lb/>
commercialism shows detrimentally. We<lb/>
would like to hear Pulver without some of<lb/>
the overwhelming backup that often<lb/>
seems to drown her out; the backup<lb/>
rivals, at times, that on Art Garfunkel's<lb/>
solo album for sheer overpowering shlock<lb/>
and an obsession with building everv<lb/>
chorus into a Mormon Tabernacle Choir<lb/>
epic. From these personnel, we ask<lb/>
silence. By pushing Pulver along, the<lb/>
musicians actually detract from her<lb/>
and or force her into vocal contortions -<lb/>
listen and you'll hear her losing control in<lb/>
a fight with the band (most notably in the<lb/>
chorus of "Part Time Woman"). Pulver's<lb/>
good enough to supply her own fireworks,<lb/>
and doesn't need this much grandiosity<lb/>
from her backup.<lb/>
oucAt<lb/>
 .and you really should look into Donny Osmond's new<lb/>
album, man, it's really far out! Dig it<lb/>
Continuing Events<lb/>
Auditions for the forthcoming production<lb/>
of Arthur Kopit's INDIANS will be held on<lb/>
December 9, 11, and 12 from 7:30 until<lb/>
10:30 in the Studio Theatre of the Drama<lb/>
Building. Anyone interested is invited to<lb/>
try-out. There are scripts on INDIANS on<lb/>
reserve in Joyner Library, and it is<lb/>
possible to get credit (hours) for<lb/>
performing in INDIANS. The production<lb/>
is set for February 5-9.<lb/>
On December 6, the Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee presents Return to Forever<lb/>
with Chick Corea in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets on sale in the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office - student and student guest tickets<lb/>
50 cents, public tickets $2.00.<lb/>
The ECU Playhouse if presenting the<lb/>
popular rock musical "Hair" this<lb/>
Wednesday, December 7 at 8:15 in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Waltzes, polkas, and operettas will be<lb/>
among the repertoire of the Vienna<lb/>
Johann Strauss Orchestra and Company<lb/>
when they appear in Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
December 4, at 8:15. Tickets on sale at<lb/>
central ticket office - student tickets<lb/>
$1.00, faculty and staff $3.00, and public<lb/>
$4.00.<lb/>
Rodeny Schmidt and E. Robert Irwin, ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty members plan to<lb/>
give an organ and harpsochord recital on<lb/>
Wednesday, December 5, at 8:15 in the<lb/>
music building.<lb/>
'�Jopor<lb/>
S<lb/>
Editor's N<lb/>
logy major<lb/>
recorded h<lb/>
Asian Stu<lb/>
University<lb/>
Gaidai, m<lb/>
appears be<lb/>
We an<lb/>
Alaska, o<lb/>
beautiful;<lb/>
the view f<lb/>
completely<lb/>
were the t<lb/>
and for i<lb/>
approachh<lb/>
our 14 he<lb/>
equally w�<lb/>
for the ye<lb/>
hours in<lb/>
hot, crowi<lb/>
crowded t<lb/>
of Osaka �<lb/>
town.<lb/>
For or<lb/>
studies s<lb/>
Nara. I th<lb/>
students<lb/>
beautiful.<lb/>
many bea<lb/>
least ono<lb/>
here.<lb/>
In my<lb/>
traditional<lb/>
while mai<lb/>
care of th<lb/>
English a<lb/>
male frier<lb/>
the house<lb/>
wearealv<lb/>
first week<lb/>
was repre<lb/>
Later on,<lb/>
unfortuna<lb/>
surroundi<lb/>
it. Also, <lb/>
more and<lb/>
now, whe<lb/>
he goes c<lb/>
worrying.<lb/>
IVBYi<lb/>
WtYC<lb/>
C0NVI<lb/>
out u<lb/>
LOIS.<lb/>
CAUTI<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mu.i<lb/>
MMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0009"/><lb/>
and a rough sort<lb/>
at her best wher.<lb/>
ong (She Don't<lb/>
le Moon" - when<lb/>
ge her with the<lb/>
bed earlier. Pul-<lb/>
"it and comfort-<lb/>
it friend, and we<lb/>
Jbum.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Dne<lb/>
only one<lb/>
a consum-<lb/>
ulver, and the<lb/>
Jtrimentally. We<lb/>
vithout some of<lb/>
up that often<lb/>
Jt; the backup<lb/>
Art Garfunkel's<lb/>
xjwering shlock<lb/>
building everv<lb/>
ibernacle Choir<lb/>
nnel, we ask<lb/>
ver along, the<lb/>
act from her<lb/>
al contortions -<lb/>
Dsing control in<lb/>
t notably in the<lb/>
man"). Pulver's<lb/>
own fireworks,<lb/>
ich grandiosity<lb/>
esenting the<lb/>
"Hair" this<lb/>
at 8:15 in<lb/>
sttas will be<lb/>
the Vienna<lb/>
md Company<lb/>
: Auditorium,<lb/>
:s on sale at<lb/>
ident tickets<lb/>
D, and public<lb/>
trt Irwin, ECU<lb/>
ibers plan to<lb/>
rd recital on<lb/>
8:15 in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
9<lb/>
'Jaoanes e:<lb/>
LLUUxi<lb/>
Students settle into Japanese life<lb/>
Editor's Note: Jan Gettler, an anthropo-<lb/>
logy major from Westbury, New York, has<lb/>
recorded her first impressions of ECU'S<lb/>
Asian Studies Program at the Kansai<lb/>
University of Foreign Studies Kansai<lb/>
Gaidai, near Osaka Japan. Her report<lb/>
appears below.<lb/>
We arrived in Tokyo via Anchorage,<lb/>
Alaska, on August 29. Anchorage was<lb/>
beautiful; the students especiallyenjoyed<lb/>
the view from the plane for the city was<lb/>
completely overcast and all that was seen<lb/>
were the tops of mountains. On to Tokyo,<lb/>
and for all of us, the unknown was<lb/>
approaching. We were ail relieved to end<lb/>
our 14 hour flight time and of course<lb/>
equally wanting to discover our new home<lb/>
for the year. Luckily, we only spent two<lb/>
hours in Tokyo, for it was unbelievably<lb/>
hot, crowded and polluted. Osaka too is<lb/>
crowded but Kansai Gaidai is in a suburb<lb/>
of Osaka and therefore sort of like a small<lb/>
town.<lb/>
For orientation week, all 46 foreign<lb/>
studies students went to Kyoto and<lb/>
Nara. I think I can speak for all eight ECU<lb/>
students in saying that Kyoto is<lb/>
beautiful. High on scenic beauty with its<lb/>
many beautiful gardens and shrines - at<lb/>
least once a week one of us is visiting<lb/>
here.<lb/>
In my family, pappa-san is strictly<lb/>
traditional in that pappa-san goes out<lb/>
while mama-san stays home and takes<lb/>
care of the children. Pappa-san is taking<lb/>
English at the university so has many<lb/>
male friends. They are always coming to<lb/>
the house to speak English with me and<lb/>
we are always doing things together. That<lb/>
first week, we all went bowling and I felt I<lb/>
was representing all American women.<lb/>
Later on, we all went to Mt. Fuji but<lb/>
unfortunately there was a fog totally<lb/>
surrounding the volcano so I didn't see<lb/>
It. Also, of interest, I am able to pick up<lb/>
more and more Japanese each week and<lb/>
now, when pappa-san is talking about me,<lb/>
he goes outside! I think I had better start<lb/>
worrying.<lb/>
Nara, the ancient capital of Japan, is<lb/>
high on art objects and we saw many<lb/>
dating back to the 7th and 8th century.<lb/>
We are all living with Japanese<lb/>
families and of course really enjoying tne<lb/>
culture. Some of us (including myself)<lb/>
commute each day to school spending<lb/>
over 60 m'nutes on the trains and<lb/>
subways. The subways are unbelievably<lb/>
crowded and it is not rare to find broken<lb/>
windows. Everv little corner has some<lb/>
body smashed into it and one sort of<lb/>
moves with the crowd for it is like a giant<lb/>
tidal wave. Also, we girls must look out<lb/>
for the chikan or "man with a thousand<lb/>
hands I myself have been approached<lb/>
several times but find it hard to tell if they<lb/>
are pushing or pinching. They don't do it<lb/>
on the street.<lb/>
The food - well, it's great and we all<lb/>
have become masters at chopsticks<lb/>
(hashi). Don't be surprised to see us all<lb/>
eating with chopsticks next year at<lb/>
ECU. And, if we want some of that great<lb/>
old American food, one can always find<lb/>
Americans at the various McDonalds and<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken places located<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
As for the culture itself, we are indeed<lb/>
fortunate to be getting all kinds of the arts<lb/>
at home. Brenda Morrison has been<lb/>
getting Koto lessons (ancient Japanese<lb/>
stringed instrument something like a<lb/>
harp) at home and is in a concert coming<lb/>
up in November. Also, her "grandmother"<lb/>
makes Kimonos and Brenda is of course<lb/>
all too eager to bring back that skill to the<lb/>
U.S. I am getting Japanese Flower<lb/>
Arrangement at home and really am<lb/>
enjoying it. Also, Charles Smith is taking<lb/>
martial arts (Sorenji Kempo) and Utho<lb/>
Cozart, Susan WhaJen, Brenda and I are<lb/>
also taking Tia Chi Chuan (a Chinese type<lb/>
martial art) from an American student.<lb/>
Susan Whalen and I have also seen<lb/>
Kabuki and Noh drama, and this weekend<lb/>
I plan to see Bunraku puppet theatre with<lb/>
some Japanese friends. The Japanese are<lb/>
extremely friendly and we sometimes<lb/>
must go to classes a back way for thev<lb/>
� V � � �<lb/>
are always coming up to us to speak<lb/>
English. Otho Cozart fits right in with<lb/>
Japanese and is constantly being<lb/>
aoDroached bv the girls.<lb/>
Last week Othoand Bill MacLawhom<lb/>
went to a tea ceremony and have been<lb/>
supplying Dr. Watrous' house with many<lb/>
beautiful Japanese art objects - of course<lb/>
- to her great pleasure. Her house<lb/>
unfortunately is made of wood (the<lb/>
Japanese style) and even now gets<lb/>
unbelievably cold in the morning. When<lb/>
winter comes, I doubt if any of us are<lb/>
going to want to get out of our warm futon<lb/>
(quilts) to go to class.<lb/>
See 'ECU Japan' on page ten.<lb/>
ROOM FOR TWO College boys. Kitchen<lb/>
&amp; laundry privileges; llv. room with<lb/>
fireplace. 1622 Longwood Dr. Inquire<lb/>
next door or call 7542562.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMIE NEEDED to share 2<lb/>
bedroom apartment on Tenth Street. 4<lb/>
minute walk from campus. $32 a month <lb/>
utilities. Good Deal! Call 754-4221 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEMS WITH your<lb/>
relationship? Confidential free therapy.<lb/>
Call 756-4459 for information.<lb/>
ABORTION,BIRTH CONTROL, free Info<lb/>
�, referral, uo to 24 weeks. General<lb/>
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation<lb/>
also available. Free pregnancy tests.<lb/>
Call PCS non-profit 202-294-79W.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '70 Midgett 35,000 miles.<lb/>
Best offer over $1000. Contact D.R. at<lb/>
752 6314.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience re-<lb/>
quired. Excellent pay. WorWwWtravJ.<lb/>
Perfect summer job or career. Send $X��<lb/>
for Information. SEAFAX, Dept.Qhf, Bok<lb/>
2044, Post Angeles, Washington, 9t342.<lb/>
LOST PAIR OF small Mack wire rim<lb/>
girl's glasses. Needed badly. Call 75<lb/>
0422 or bring them by 703 White<lb/>
Dormitory.<lb/>
NEED A JOB? Make in the<lb/>
presentations for a nationally recognized<lb/>
company. Marketing beautiful products.<lb/>
Sales experience helpful but not<lb/>
necessary. Call 752 4479 9-1:00 p.m. <lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION:<lb/>
758 HELP. Corner Evans and 14th<lb/>
Streets. Abortion referrals, suicide Inter-<lb/>
vention, drug problems, birth control<lb/>
information, overnight housing. All free<lb/>
services and confidential.<lb/>
Hardee's has got<lb/>
your number.<lb/>
'r w v<lb/>
w w<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER<lb/>
4th<lb/>
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DAILY SPECIAL<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE FISH DINNER<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$1.95<lb/>
including French Fries, Cole Slaw,<lb/>
and Hushpuppies<lb/>
' Children under 12 $100<lb/>
RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT<lb/>
710 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Across the River<lb/>
If your student ID. number<lb/>
is listed here, you're the winner<lb/>
of a free meal at Hardee's:<lb/>
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For the payoff just present<lb/>
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Offer good only at<lb/>
Also featuring Pitt Cooked BBQ, Chicken, and Steaks<lb/>
Phone 752-2624<lb/>
LnJ<lb/>
300 E. Greenville Boulevard,<lb/>
and 10th Street, in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
mm <lb/>
ecu Japan Chick Coreas 'Return to Forever'<lb/>
Continued from page nine.<lb/>
Traveling, well, Bill, Otho and Kathy<lb/>
Wacaser have gone to Shirahama in<lb/>
southern Honshu; and Otho, Susan and<lb/>
Kathy also went to the southern island of<lb/>
Skikoku in search of archeological<lb/>
sites. Japan is full of archeological sites<lb/>
and some of us hope to go on digs that<lb/>
are going on right now. Otho even found<lb/>
some Jomon cottery pieces in Shikoku.<lb/>
The language you ask? It is difficult<lb/>
but with time, conquerable. Pilkyu Kim,<lb/>
being Korean, has a great advantage over<lb/>
all of us as he can read the signs and<lb/>
characters (kanji) and we are all envious.<lb/>
Well, ECU students, that's about the<lb/>
news up to date. We are really having a<lb/>
great time here and for me I can now see<lb/>
why one never wants to leave Japan, for<lb/>
each day has an adventure all its own.<lb/>
mainlines here Thursday night<lb/>
'One of the tightest, most empathetic<lb/>
group of musicians I have ever<lb/>
heard Return to Forever is a Musical<lb/>
Monster says The Evening Bulletin.<lb/>
The group's work falls in the category<lb/>
of "Progressive-JazzRock What this<lb/>
means is perhaps best expressed by one<lb/>
as he described a performance of Corea<lb/>
and Company, "They played classy, gutsy<lb/>
head music, that managed to seduce the<lb/>
body into jerky electrical shakes<lb/>
Corea's fourth album, "Light as a<lb/>
Feather promises to be a classic in its<lb/>
field Their latest release, "Hymns of the<lb/>
Seventh Galazy while appealing to a<lb/>
larger listening audience makes no<lb/>
sacrifice in quality.<lb/>
The act consists of guitarist Bill<lb/>
Conners- percussionist Lenny White;<lb/>
bassist Stanley Clarke; with pianist Chick<lb/>
Corea at the controls, insistently<lb/>
interjecting piano riffs that challenge the<lb/>
others to keep up with him and brings<lb/>
their performance to a near-frenzy.<lb/>
The group has already come to fame<lb/>
on the West Coast and now, after having<lb/>
headlined Philharmonic Hall to a sold-out<lb/>
audience, and having completed a tour in<lb/>
the United States and Canada, Chick<lb/>
Corea and Return to Forever are widely<lb/>
applauded throughout the country.<lb/>
Rock Magazine, "Next time you're<lb/>
within striking distance of an appearance<lb/>
by Chick Corea and the gang, you owe it<lb/>
to yourself to get on over and find out<lb/>
what all the shouting is about. You may<lb/>
even do some shouting of your<lb/>
own This is your chance.<lb/>
On December 6, the Special Concert<lb/>
Committee presents Return to Forever<lb/>
with Chick Corea in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale in the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office beginning November<lb/>
29. Student tickets are $.50, student<lb/>
guest tickets are $.50 (limit of one<lb/>
perstudent), and public tickets are<lb/>
$2.00. Be sure to buy your tickets in<lb/>
advance. Only public tickets will be sold<lb/>
at the door. Plan to be there!<lb/>
WILL'S AUDIO<lb/>
"The Other Sound"<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
INSTANT REPAY FOR ALUMINUM<lb/>
BUDWEISER CANS<lb/>
Budweiser will buy ALL aluminum<lb/>
beer cans. Beginning January 12<lb/>
Budweiser will pay 10 cents per pound<lb/>
for all the aluminum beer cans you can<lb/>
find. This will be a six weeks event with<lb/>
all organizations, fraternities and<lb/>
sororities invited to compete. A free<lb/>
color T.V. will be given to the<lb/>
organization bringing in the most<lb/>
cans. Help Ecology and Promote<lb/>
Competition in this Project.<lb/>
SAVE THOSE ALUMINUM<lb/>
BEER CANS<lb/>
Pick up location will be announced.<lb/>
 V2 Block Up From Harmony i<lb/>
 House. Check their prices, j<lb/>
I then come see us.<lb/>
Quality Stereo Equipment<lb/>
at Believable Prices<lb/>
Will's Audio<lb/>
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research assistance only.<lb/>
Leather Goods Made To Order<lb/>
THE TRADING POST<lb/>
Sale On All Summer Items<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
IS<lb/>
"FISH HOUSE COUNTRY<lb/>
GO PIRATES<lb/>
IN WASHINGTON<lb/>
Drive a Little and Eat a Lot !<lb/>
ALL YOUCAN EAT<lb/>
Flounder $1951 Clams $g25<lb/>
419 West<lb/>
Main St.<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
946-1301<lb/>
All letter<lb/>
column. Th<lb/>
sports staff<lb/>
Student!<lb/>
should not<lb/>
The foil<lb/>
Coll(<lb/>
something<lb/>
intercollegi<lb/>
put players<lb/>
Joe Pat<lb/>
violations <lb/>
Frank I<lb/>
done he I<lb/>
conference<lb/>
Thesec<lb/>
on Americ<lb/>
any accou<lb/>
recruiting<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
administre<lb/>
stamins<lb/>
In 1931<lb/>
head of th<lb/>
got so fee<lb/>
out of tt<lb/>
intercolle<lb/>
Last y<lb/>
by 620 co<lb/>
gate was<lb/>
Interc<lb/>
moral cor<lb/>
Aj<lb/>
t made r<lb/>
the hard<lb/>
Assp<lb/>
basket ba<lb/>
more inf<lb/>
Coac<lb/>
threat to<lb/>
Pirate o<lb/>
Even<lb/>
for East<lb/>
Minges'<lb/>
of "inex<lb/>
congrat<lb/>
really n<lb/>
If ot<lb/>
of a po<lb/>
Pu<lb/>
Fou<lb/>
team tl<lb/>
the an<lb/>
held at<lb/>
The<lb/>
Purple'<lb/>
lone c<lb/>
the 20<lb/>
time c<lb/>
the 20<lb/>
Mc<lb/>
diving<lb/>
the or<lb/>
of 288<lb/>
Fr�<lb/>
recorc<lb/>
of 10<lb/>
Greer<lb/>
"I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0011"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1�73<lb/>
n<lb/>
Clubbers snare fiffe<lb/>
ng<lb/>
of your<lb/>
r chance,<lb/>
pecial concert<lb/>
rn to Forever<lb/>
it Auditorium,<lb/>
n the Central<lb/>
g November<lb/>
$.50, student<lb/>
(limit of one<lb/>
tickets are<lb/>
Dur tickets in<lb/>
ts will be sold<lb/>
re!<lb/>
To-Morrowfs Sports<lb/>
mony<lb/>
rices,<lb/>
nt<lb/>
ITRY<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
946-1301<lb/>
By JACK MORROW<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
IsxsBSsassssaassssassst<lb/>
The following article appeared in a weekly magazine.<lb/>
"�?�?'� - s,ate- reMf,ly 21"in,e,viewrer' "recrui,in9<lb/>
nSfcomplaints.hing l.he Carnegie Fouron iss�jj-ud,<lb/>
on American college athletics. Sad the study. lr�"��� m, study of the<lb/>
any account of �J?t1E?5S2�ortSmS dirert evidence that college<lb/>
recruiting and subsid,zingof co'Wr�ajoras ���,� .among college<lb/>
athletics. .m,uiS; IS dishonesty. The impairment of moral<lb/>
administrative officers, ���!��"��)� college athletics<lb/>
stamins is the darkest blot among An�ncan col ege now<lb/>
r-v-Sa155 aB in a"<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics. ?nowa! 2992 football games played<lb/>
by xsarjr SiSS2,0O,ba"<lb/>
SfeSSffiSStf�.��i. . is �so -he .<lb/>
moral corrupter of higher education in America.<lb/>
Jf THUMBED<lb/>
I as , was throw, out of Minges MM .���� TTSKl<lb/>
, noe rm realize how ��0JSa<lb/>
,he harder you try to do your ob, ����frSd And out all I could about Pirate<lb/>
JZ2�2tE&amp; rceion in person would be much<lb/>
, SSSSELm- than learning aboot the .earn�0�Pdha (<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn somehow fett hat my P�en�J �&amp; abandon � inform<lb/>
Ihreat to his team's secrecy and that I would run or; wn<lb/>
Pirate opponents of what ,s in store to �J�t� �, OMdSSon should be in store<lb/>
Even though I was denied ape . W� 0�� of should jjp<lb/>
S' SSRSttRS KM- y��ng chargers will shun their labels<lb/>
� o, �fnexp.rienoed" and MM�M<lb/>
congratulations to that Pirate�J� � g Carolina athletics.<lb/>
Purple swamps Gold ,58-36<lb/>
� t irwHiviHnAi winners inclu(<lb/>
East Carolina's club football team<lb/>
brought home their fourth league<lb/>
championship in as many years with an<lb/>
8-0 victory over the Central Piedmont club<lb/>
team The game was played in Charlotte.<lb/>
Rick McKay's three yard sweep<lb/>
midway through the third period enabled<lb/>
the Bucs to bring the championship<lb/>
trophy back to Greenville.<lb/>
McKay's run followed a 25 yard pass<lb/>
from Denny Lynch, to his brother,<lb/>
Mike. The pass advanced the ball to<lb/>
CPCC's six yard line. Two plays later,<lb/>
McKay skirted the end for the game's only<lb/>
score<lb/>
On a previous drive, the Pirates had<lb/>
fumbled at the Central Piedmont<lb/>
five ECU'S defensive unit then held ana<lb/>
forced the Outlaws to punt. The Pirates<lb/>
then took over and travelled 38 yards for<lb/>
the touchdown.<lb/>
Terry Ramos' 30 yard punt return<lb/>
orovided the Bucs another scoring<lb/>
opportunity, but CPCCa defense was<lb/>
successful in stopping East Carolina s<lb/>
scoring efforts.<lb/>
Running seemed to be the name of the<lb/>
game as the Pirates rushed for 237 yards<lb/>
and Central Piedmont grounded out<lb/>
183. McKay led the Bucs with 94 yards<lb/>
and Ramos added 87. - <lb/>
The game's top runner was Central<lb/>
Piedmont's Curtis Smith. Smith earned<lb/>
the ball 22 times for 123 yards and kept<lb/>
East Carolina on their toes with several<lb/>
long bursts. ia�<lb/>
The Pirates' defense, despite the 183<lb/>
yards given up on the ground, Performed<lb/>
admirably. CPCCs deepest penetration<lb/>
was to the Buc 17 and Piedmont crossed<lb/>
midfield only once in the second hair<lb/>
The Pirate defensive unit, which gave<lb/>
up a mere 37 yards through the air, was<lb/>
led by Bronco Bender and John<lb/>
Pew Bender had nine solo tackles and<lb/>
five assists. Pew came up with two<lb/>
interceptions, ending the season with a<lb/>
new club record of 11 pick offs.<lb/>
CPCC performed well also on defense<lb/>
as they limited the Bucs to only eight<lb/>
oonts The Pirates had averaged � pomts<lb/>
per game prior to the championship<lb/>
East Carolina finished their season<lb/>
with an 8-1 record. The only loss was to<lb/>
N.C. State, 32-30, in the club's third game<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
triumph<lb/>
The Pirate women swimmers won only<lb/>
four out of a possible 16 events, but they<lb/>
Were still able to capture the second<lb/>
annual East Carolina Women's Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Swimming and Diving Champ-<lb/>
ionships. The one day event was held<lb/>
Saturday at Minges pool.<lb/>
The lady Pirates finished with 324<lb/>
po,nts to second place UNCs 322. Duke<lb/>
hnifched third, UNC-G was fourth and<lb/>
Raleigh Consolidated was fifth. By<lb/>
winning this championship, East Carolina<lb/>
proved themselves to be the number one<lb/>
women's team in the state.<lb/>
UNCs Nancy Noneman was awarded<lb/>
the trophy for the high scorer of the<lb/>
meet Miss Noneman swan to victories in<lb/>
the 50 and 100-yard butterfly events the<lb/>
50-yard breastroke and she competed on<lb/>
the Tar Heels victorious 200-yard medley<lb/>
The meet was not as close as the final<lb/>
score indicated. The Pirates winning<lb/>
300-vard freestyle relay was disqualified<lb/>
am! the first place to UNC. So instead<lb/>
of winning the meet by 40 points, the<lb/>
women edged out a two point victory.<lb/>
East Carolina's outstanding performer<lb/>
awards went to D.J. Conlyn Tlmmy<lb/>
Pharr Judi Peacock, and Mary McDuffie.<lb/>
Miss Conlyn recorded her best times<lb/>
,n the 100 and 400-yard freestyleevents<lb/>
and her time 0. her leg of the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle event was her best ever.<lb/>
M.ss Pharr recorded her best times in<lb/>
the 50, 100 and 200-yard freestyle<lb/>
events. Miss Peacock did her best times<lb/>
in the 50-yard butterfly andI the 100-Jjrf<lb/>
backstroke events, and M.ss ff<lb/>
turned in her fastest times ever in the 5C<lb/>
and 100-yard breastroke.<lb/>
The Pirate's most outstanding etton<lb/>
award was awarded to Carolina Cooney<lb/>
for her fine performance in the one-meter<lb/>
diving competition. .<lb/>
East Carolina's lone double winner<lb/>
was Linda Shull. Miss Shull captured the<lb/>
50 and 100-yard backstroke events<lb/>
The Bucs Sue Bingham won the gold<lb/>
medal in the three-meter diving and<lb/>
teammate Cindy Wheeler was victorious<lb/>
in the one-meter event.<lb/>
Linda Smiley finished second in the<lb/>
200-yard individual medley and third in<lb/>
the 100-yard butterfly. Beverly Osborn<lb/>
11 third in the 100, 20C) and 0C-�rd<lb/>
freestyle events and Miss PeacocK<lb/>
Shed third in the yardbackstrke.<lb/>
East Carolina's 200-yard medley relay,<lb/>
consisting of Barbara Strange, Peggy<lb/>
Toth. Miss Shull and Miss Smiley finishec<lb/>
th,fEven though the Pirates captured ontj<lb/>
four first places, their depth was enougr<lb/>
to hold off the challengers.<lb/>
The women, 2-0 in dual meel<lb/>
competition, will next trave I tc<lb/>
Greensboro on Dec. 8 to take ort UNC-G<lb/>
and Queens College in a double dua<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Four meet records fell as the Purple<lb/>
team thrashed the Gold squad, 58-38<lb/>
STamS intrasquad swimming meet<lb/>
hPld at Minges Pool on Nov. 13.<lb/>
he' The Gok Paul SchiffelI andthe<lb/>
Purole's Jack Morrow were the meets<lb/>
Tone doubte winners. Schiffel captured<lb/>
�f rhman Steve Rued.inger set a new<lb/>
record in the 1000-yard freestyle. His time<lb/>
of 10:43.5 just edged the Golds Larry<lb/>
Green by one second.<lb/>
Other individual winners included<lb/>
Ross Bohlken in the 200-yard freesty e,<lb/>
ESin O'Shea in the 50-yard freestyle,<lb/>
KM?ke bS swan to .f"�<lb/>
as he won the 20O-yard butterfy,Bob VaM<lb/>
captured the 100-yard freestyle, Green<lb/>
won the 500-yard freestyle and Ouhe<lb/>
Kemp swan to victory in the 200-yard<lb/>
breastroke event. � � �. ?�<lb/>
The meet was marred by the injury to<lb/>
freshman diver Ken Morin. Pfcortotht<lb/>
start of the meet, Morin struck theid.vmg<lb/>
board and had to be carried from the pool<lb/>
oa stretcher Thirty-five sticr were<lb/>
required to close the wound in his.head<lb/>
Ld a team spokesman indicated that he<lb/>
shoutdte able to return to competition<lb/>
within the week.<lb/>
selected<lb/>
OFFENSE<lb/>
WR-Walt Walker (Davidson) and Stan<lb/>
Eure(ECU). .<lb/>
T�r k Pawlewicz (W&amp;M)<lb/>
T -A.KW barman (VMD and Dan Utley<lb/>
i Human! -�� nH iim<lb/>
0Gren 1 oupe (ECU) and Jim<lb/>
C J;c Uci�ry(VVM)<lb/>
r�R r � ' R�!�imereM (ECU)<lb/>
P8 V. -sir. rVurm) (ECU) and<lb/>
E�Cary Godette (ECU) and Lee<lb/>
Pearson (Richmond).<lb/>
T Ron Reynolds (ASU) and Vic Moye<lb/>
iPrn Mid)<lb/>
LB-Danny Kepley (ECU), Pat Kelley<lb/>
(Richmond) and Tony Cicoris (The<lb/>
Citadeti . <lb/>
B -Vmce Perone (Furman), uerv,<lb/>
vy,iiot-�� (VMi). Mike Mynck (ECU), anc<lb/>
Boli Loi -tte .Richmond).<lb/>
P -Russell Brown (W&amp;M).<lb/>
Tom Frazier and Ken Strayhorr.<lb/>
received honorable mention honors ori<lb/>
offense, as did Ken Moore, Gar<lb/>
N.klason, and Jim Bolding on defense for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039892_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 204 DEC. 1973<lb/>
�4MMpM<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
Pirates sweep NC Championships<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina wrestling team won<lb/>
an astounding ten of ten first place titles<lb/>
at the North Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
Championships, held this past weekend<lb/>
at Carmichael Auditorium in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Over 200 wrestlers, representing all of<lb/>
the universities and colleges in the state,<lb/>
competed in the tournament. It was quite<lb/>
a feat for East Carolina to improve on its<lb/>
performance of last year. Eight men took<lb/>
home first place trophies for the Pirates<lb/>
last season. Coach John Welborn would<lb/>
have been completely 3atisfied with a<lb/>
repeat performance.<lb/>
"There are one in a million odds of a<lb/>
team doing this commented Welborn.<lb/>
"Everything had to go right for us, and it<lb/>
did<lb/>
There was some mention of East<lb/>
Carolina's dominance of this tournament,<lb/>
and the possibility of some alteration in<lb/>
the format was discussed.<lb/>
"Some of the small schools discussed<lb/>
possibly having an NAIA tournament and<lb/>
just inviting the small schools said<lb/>
Welborn. "However, we plan to have it<lb/>
next year with all schools in North<lb/>
Carolina competing. It would be a<lb/>
mistake to discontinue the tournament. I<lb/>
hink the wrestling has improved every<lb/>
ear on all the teams in North Carolina<lb/>
The following are the North Carolina<lb/>
Collegiate Champions in their respective<lb/>
veight classes: 118-Jim Blair: 126Paul<lb/>
Cetchum: 134�Milt Sherman; 142-Tom<lb/>
Harriott: 150-Jack Stortz; 158Bruce<lb/>
Hall: 167-Ron Whitcomb; 177�Bill Hill;<lb/>
90-Mike Radford; and Heavyweight-<lb/>
'Villie Bryant.<lb/>
Ketchum, Whitcomb, Hill and Bryant<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S CARL SUMMERELL<lb/>
was named the Southern Conference<lb/>
Player of the Year recently. Summered<lb/>
received 53 votes and the next closest was<lb/>
Richmond's Barty Smith who received<lb/>
nine votes.<lb/>
Crates place six on<lb/>
Mi-Conference squad<lb/>
The honors continue to roll in for East<lb/>
Carolina's two-time Southern Conference<lb/>
.hampionsfup football team. The All<lb/>
Conference selections have been made by<lb/>
he Southern Conference Sports Writers<lb/>
Association and the coaches, with the<lb/>
Pirates capturing eight spot. Second<lb/>
place Richrrond placed six men on the<lb/>
team<lb/>
all won their title matches by pinning their<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
Hill's title was his fourth consecutive<lb/>
NC. Collegiate Championship. No one<lb/>
else has ever won more than two<lb/>
individual titles, at East Carolina or any<lb/>
other school<lb/>
Hill also won, for the second straight<lb/>
year, the trophy for being the<lb/>
"Outstanding Wrestler in North Carolina<lb/>
Other Pirates who placed in the<lb/>
tournament were: Glenn Baker (third at<lb/>
126); bucky Baker (fourth at 142); Steve<lb/>
Satterthwaite (second at 150); Tim<lb/>
McAteer (fourth at 150): Judd Larrimore<lb/>
(fourth at 167). and Jim Cox (third at 177).<lb/>
The Buc grapplers were in competition<lb/>
last night at Greensboro against the tough<lb/>
Athletes in Action. AIA. composed of<lb/>
some of last years' Olympic wrestlers and<lb/>
national AAU champions is expected to<lb/>
de'eat ECU in the team totals, but the<lb/>
Pircitos wiil provide stiff opposition. This<lb/>
match was originally scheduled to be AIA<lb/>
versus the NC. Collegiate All-Stars, but<lb/>
those plans were laid to rest this weekend<lb/>
m Chapel Hill.<lb/>
As an added note, this match will be<lb/>
taped for a later showing on Channel 2, as<lb/>
will the Pirates next match It is also<lb/>
against AIA and takes place in Raleigh on<lb/>
Saturday. This one will be taped by<lb/>
Channel 5 for a later showing in this area.<lb/>
Buc Cagers drop UNC-W; Duke wins<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
�<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Only one week into the basketball<lb/>
season and already East Carolina has<lb/>
shattered UNC-Wilmington's hopes and<lb/>
scared Neil I McGeachy's Duke Blue Devils<lb/>
to end the week 1-1.<lb/>
On Saturday night Tom Quinn's<lb/>
Pirates traveled to Cameron Indoor<lb/>
Stadium to meet the Duke team<lb/>
preseasoned ranked in the ACC basement<lb/>
yet with a long tradition of hardcourt<lb/>
excellence.<lb/>
Led by Roger Atkinson's scoring and<lb/>
Nicky White's rebounding ECU was down<lb/>
by only 42-38 at halftime. To reflect how<lb/>
close the game was, Duke at the half was<lb/>
shooting 55 per cent to East Carolina's 38<lb/>
yet could only manage a slim four point<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Duke had no better luck at the<lb/>
beginning of the second half, as they<lb/>
jumped into an eight point lead that<lb/>
dwindled due to a great blocked shot by<lb/>
Atkinson of a sure layup and the Pirate's<lb/>
full court press.<lb/>
Kenny Edmonds hit a 15 foot jump<lb/>
shot from the corner with 14:01 remaining<lb/>
which tied the game at 48 all.<lb/>
But Chris Redding of Duke started to<lb/>
hit from the outside and ECU got in foul<lb/>
trouble and finally succumbed 82-69.<lb/>
East Carolina shot only 42.4 per cent<lb/>
from the field yet still lost by only thirteen<lb/>
points. Tom Marsh and Donnie Owens<lb/>
both fouled out for the Pirates.<lb/>
Coach McGeachy was greatly im-<lb/>
pressed by East Carolina.<lb/>
"I was very impressed with ECU. They<lb/>
have an excellent front line with Nicky<lb/>
White, Atkinson and (Robert) Geter. I<lb/>
think Geter is going to be the complete<lb/>
player as soon as he goes to his outside<lb/>
game. That's been denied him because of<lb/>
his broken thumb. ECU has excellent<lb/>
quickness which was a problem for<lb/>
us. And they certainly didn't quit and<lb/>
were well coached throughout<lb/>
McGeachy believed the key to Duke's<lb/>
victory was the play of Duke guard Kevin<lb/>
Billerman.<lb/>
"We lost Billerman to two fouls very<lb/>
early in the game. I didn't want him to get<lb/>
his third before the half, and it gave<lb/>
experience to our younger players in a<lb/>
tough situation. With Billerman back in<lb/>
he gave us the experience we needed to<lb/>
get the ball to Chris Redding and Bob<lb/>
Fleischer who scored 18 and 16 points for<lb/>
us<lb/>
Roger Atkinson led ECU with 20 points<lb/>
and got plenty of help from Nicky White<lb/>
and Reggie Lee who scored 15 and 11<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Atkinson, a co-captain of the Pirates,<lb/>
believed ECU made a respectable<lb/>
showing.<lb/>
"I think we were in the game all the<lb/>
way and had a chance to win. They had a<lb/>
m<lb/>
few more breaks than we did. I think the<lb/>
guys hustled and I don't care who we<lb/>
play, we'll play to win<lb/>
Friday night ECU beat the Seahawks<lb/>
of UNC-W 69-62.<lb/>
The Pirates dominated the boards<lb/>
46-34 and consistently outhustled the<lb/>
swift Seahawks.<lb/>
UNC-W jumped out to a quick 12-4<lb/>
lead and held it until Reggie Lee's layup<lb/>
made it 24-22 with 4:11 to play in the first<lb/>
victory was the domination of Nicky White<lb/>
in the pivot.<lb/>
"I thought Nicky White was probably<lb/>
the most effective against us. We had so<lb/>
much of a mismatch against him. He<lb/>
probably wasn't their leading scorer but<lb/>
he got what I thought were the big<lb/>
baskets<lb/>
Coach Quinn was elated by his young<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"It was a typical opener for both<lb/>
PIRATES GREG ASHORN has shot repelled by UNC-W center.<lb/>
half.<lb/>
UNC-Ws Willie Jackson continued his<lb/>
fine outside shooting and his 12 first half<lb/>
points paced the Seahawks into a 35-33<lb/>
halftime lead.<lb/>
The second half saw the lead change<lb/>
hands until Greg Ashorn hit Reggie Lee<lb/>
with a great pass to put ECU in the lead<lb/>
for good at 50-48.<lb/>
UNC-W kept it close in the remaining<lb/>
ten minutes due mostly to the play of<lb/>
Mike Cherry who led the Seahawk scorers<lb/>
with 21 points.<lb/>
Coach Mel Gibson of UNC-W<lb/>
commented on the game.<lb/>
"I think we have a better club than they<lb/>
expected us to have. We were<lb/>
out-rebounded 27-11 in the first half, and I<lb/>
thought that was a big factor. I thought<lb/>
the turning point in the game was when<lb/>
we lost Cherry in the last six<lb/>
minutes. East Carolina has the makings<lb/>
of a fine ball club, though I was surprised<lb/>
at the number of players they used<lb/>
Gibson believed the key to the Pirates'<lb/>
teams. I was impressed by our team's<lb/>
aggressiveness. We played all 13 players<lb/>
tonight. I think we forced Wilmington<lb/>
completely out of their offense the second<lb/>
half, in fact the only offense they showed<lb/>
was at the foul line<lb/>
The leading scorer for the Pirates was<lb/>
Reggie Lee with 19 points, and Quinn<lb/>
spoke favorably of his freshman guard.<lb/>
"We have been impressed with Reggie<lb/>
throughout the preseason. Reggie pre-<lb/>
sents quite a lot of offense. As soon as<lb/>
his defense comes around he'll be one of<lb/>
the best young guards in the state<lb/>
The Pirates junior varsity lost twice,<lb/>
87-67 to Duke and 87-55 to Ml. Olive<lb/>
College. Against Duke, Tyrone Williams<lb/>
and Dickie Flye paced the Baby Bucs with<lb/>
12 and 11 points respectively. Tim Brogan<lb/>
hauled down 6 rebounds for the Pirates.<lb/>
Next the Pirates travel to Raleigh to<lb/>
face David Thompson and NC.<lb/>
State. The team is called invinsible and<lb/>
Thompson unstopable. Saturday night<lb/>
the Pirates encounter Davidson in their<lb/>
first Southern Conference game.<lb/>
jr<lb/>
1<lb/>
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f<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039892_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>